Grim up North? Exploring the diet of urban populations in post-medieval Greater Manchester, England, using stable isotope analysis

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Grim up North? Exploring the diet of urban populations in post-medieval Greater Manchester, England, using stable isotope analysis. / Chidimuro, Blessing; Holst, Malin; Newman, Sophie; Keefe, Katie; Collins, Matthew J.; Alexander, Michelle.

In: Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences, Vol. 15, No. 11, 174, 2023.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Chidimuro, B, Holst, M, Newman, S, Keefe, K, Collins, MJ & Alexander, M 2023, 'Grim up North? Exploring the diet of urban populations in post-medieval Greater Manchester, England, using stable isotope analysis', Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences, vol. 15, no. 11, 174. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12520-023-01881-7

APA

Chidimuro, B., Holst, M., Newman, S., Keefe, K., Collins, M. J., & Alexander, M. (2023). Grim up North? Exploring the diet of urban populations in post-medieval Greater Manchester, England, using stable isotope analysis. Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences, 15(11), [174]. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12520-023-01881-7

Vancouver

Chidimuro B, Holst M, Newman S, Keefe K, Collins MJ, Alexander M. Grim up North? Exploring the diet of urban populations in post-medieval Greater Manchester, England, using stable isotope analysis. Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences. 2023;15(11). 174. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12520-023-01881-7

Author

Chidimuro, Blessing ; Holst, Malin ; Newman, Sophie ; Keefe, Katie ; Collins, Matthew J. ; Alexander, Michelle. / Grim up North? Exploring the diet of urban populations in post-medieval Greater Manchester, England, using stable isotope analysis. In: Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences. 2023 ; Vol. 15, No. 11.

Bibtex

@article{8906cf6ad80e4aecb383a592f8e813cb,
title = "Grim up North? Exploring the diet of urban populations in post-medieval Greater Manchester, England, using stable isotope analysis",
abstract = "Historical evidence suggests that social status played a major role in all aspects of society in eighteenth–nineteenth century England. We present an insight into how socioeconomic status affected the dietary habits of two post-medieval urban populations from Greater Manchester, northwest England. Stable carbon (δ13C) and nitrogen (δ15N) isotope ratios were measured in humans from Cross Street Unitarian Chapel (middle class: n = 90) in Manchester city centre and Chapel Street, Hazel Grove (lower status with few middle-class individuals: n = 34). A large sample of 111 faunal remains from Cross Street (n = 37) and Norton Priory, Cheshire (n = 74), provide an animal baseline, dramatically expanding the post-medieval animal isotopic dataset for England. Sheep from Norton Priory show high δ15N isotope values indicative of saltmarsh grazing. Results for human populations revealed a mixed diet of plant and animal protein from C3 terrestrial environments with some potential contribution of aquatic protein. Significant differences revealed between the two populations indicate unequal access to food by status. Intra-population variation at Hazel Grove suggests dietary distinctions by age and sex. Non-adults consumed diets poor in high trophic level protein, whereas adult males consumed greater amounts of animal products. Conversely, the data suggests that at the wealthier Cross Street, there was greater access to high trophic level protein by all. Comparisons between the Manchester populations and those from similar socioeconomic classes from the Midlands and southern England, including London, reveal a bioarchaeological picture of dietary diversity and differential access to resources which impact significantly on well-being during this tumultuous period of industrial England.",
keywords = "Diet, FRUITS, Isotope, Post-medieval, Status",
author = "Blessing Chidimuro and Malin Holst and Sophie Newman and Katie Keefe and Collins, {Matthew J.} and Michelle Alexander",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023, The Author(s).",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1007/s12520-023-01881-7",
language = "English",
volume = "15",
journal = "Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences",
issn = "1866-9557",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Grim up North? Exploring the diet of urban populations in post-medieval Greater Manchester, England, using stable isotope analysis

AU - Chidimuro, Blessing

AU - Holst, Malin

AU - Newman, Sophie

AU - Keefe, Katie

AU - Collins, Matthew J.

AU - Alexander, Michelle

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2023, The Author(s).

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Historical evidence suggests that social status played a major role in all aspects of society in eighteenth–nineteenth century England. We present an insight into how socioeconomic status affected the dietary habits of two post-medieval urban populations from Greater Manchester, northwest England. Stable carbon (δ13C) and nitrogen (δ15N) isotope ratios were measured in humans from Cross Street Unitarian Chapel (middle class: n = 90) in Manchester city centre and Chapel Street, Hazel Grove (lower status with few middle-class individuals: n = 34). A large sample of 111 faunal remains from Cross Street (n = 37) and Norton Priory, Cheshire (n = 74), provide an animal baseline, dramatically expanding the post-medieval animal isotopic dataset for England. Sheep from Norton Priory show high δ15N isotope values indicative of saltmarsh grazing. Results for human populations revealed a mixed diet of plant and animal protein from C3 terrestrial environments with some potential contribution of aquatic protein. Significant differences revealed between the two populations indicate unequal access to food by status. Intra-population variation at Hazel Grove suggests dietary distinctions by age and sex. Non-adults consumed diets poor in high trophic level protein, whereas adult males consumed greater amounts of animal products. Conversely, the data suggests that at the wealthier Cross Street, there was greater access to high trophic level protein by all. Comparisons between the Manchester populations and those from similar socioeconomic classes from the Midlands and southern England, including London, reveal a bioarchaeological picture of dietary diversity and differential access to resources which impact significantly on well-being during this tumultuous period of industrial England.

AB - Historical evidence suggests that social status played a major role in all aspects of society in eighteenth–nineteenth century England. We present an insight into how socioeconomic status affected the dietary habits of two post-medieval urban populations from Greater Manchester, northwest England. Stable carbon (δ13C) and nitrogen (δ15N) isotope ratios were measured in humans from Cross Street Unitarian Chapel (middle class: n = 90) in Manchester city centre and Chapel Street, Hazel Grove (lower status with few middle-class individuals: n = 34). A large sample of 111 faunal remains from Cross Street (n = 37) and Norton Priory, Cheshire (n = 74), provide an animal baseline, dramatically expanding the post-medieval animal isotopic dataset for England. Sheep from Norton Priory show high δ15N isotope values indicative of saltmarsh grazing. Results for human populations revealed a mixed diet of plant and animal protein from C3 terrestrial environments with some potential contribution of aquatic protein. Significant differences revealed between the two populations indicate unequal access to food by status. Intra-population variation at Hazel Grove suggests dietary distinctions by age and sex. Non-adults consumed diets poor in high trophic level protein, whereas adult males consumed greater amounts of animal products. Conversely, the data suggests that at the wealthier Cross Street, there was greater access to high trophic level protein by all. Comparisons between the Manchester populations and those from similar socioeconomic classes from the Midlands and southern England, including London, reveal a bioarchaeological picture of dietary diversity and differential access to resources which impact significantly on well-being during this tumultuous period of industrial England.

KW - Diet

KW - FRUITS

KW - Isotope

KW - Post-medieval

KW - Status

U2 - 10.1007/s12520-023-01881-7

DO - 10.1007/s12520-023-01881-7

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85175736084

VL - 15

JO - Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences

JF - Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences

SN - 1866-9557

IS - 11

M1 - 174

ER -

ID: 372961470