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Featured researches published by Anders Fischer.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Ancient lipids reveal continuity in culinary practices across the transition to agriculture in Northern Europe

Oliver E. Craig; Valerie J. Steele; Anders Fischer; Sönke Hartz; Søren H. Andersen; P. Donohoe; Aikaterini Glykou; Hayley Saul; D. M. Jones; E. Koch; Carl Heron

Farming transformed societies globally. Yet, despite more than a century of research, there is little consensus on the speed or completeness of this fundamental change and, consequently, on its principal drivers. For Northern Europe, the debate has often centered on the rich archaeological record of the Western Baltic, but even here it is unclear how quickly or completely people abandoned wild terrestrial and marine resources after the introduction of domesticated plants and animals at ∼4000 calibrated years B.C. Ceramic containers are found ubiquitously on these sites and contain remarkably well-preserved lipids derived from the original use of the vessel. Reconstructing culinary practices from this ceramic record can contribute to longstanding debates concerning the origins of farming. Here we present data on the molecular and isotopic characteristics of lipids extracted from 133 ceramic vessels and 100 carbonized surface residues dating to immediately before and after the first evidence of domesticated animals and plants in the Western Baltic. The presence of specific lipid biomarkers, notably ω-(o-alkylphenyl)alkanoic acids, and the isotopic composition of individual n-alkanoic acids clearly show that a significant proportion (∼20%) of ceramic vessels with lipids preserved continued to be used for processing marine and freshwater resources across the transition to agriculture in this region. Although changes in pottery use are immediately evident, our data challenge the popular notions that economies were completely transformed with the arrival of farming and that Neolithic pottery was exclusively associated with produce from domesticated animals and plants.


Antiquity | 2013

Illuminating the Late Mesolithic: residue analysis of ‘blubber’ lamps from Northern Europe

Carl Heron; Søren H. Andersen; Anders Fischer; Aikaterini Glykou; Sönke Hartz; Hayley Saul; Valerie J. Steele; Oliver E. Craig

Shallow oval bowls used on the Baltic coast in the Mesolithic have been suggested as oil lamps, burning animal fat. Here researchers confirm the use of four coastal examples as lamps burning blubber—the fat of marine animals, while an inland example burned fat from terrestrial mammals or freshwater aquatics—perhaps eels. The authors use a combination of lipid biomarker and bulk and single-compound carbon isotope analysis to indicate the origin of the residues in these vessels.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Phytoliths in Pottery Reveal the Use of Spice in European Prehistoric Cuisine

Hayley Saul; Marco Madella; Anders Fischer; Aikaterini Glykou; Sönke Hartz; Oliver E. Craig

Here we present evidence of phytoliths preserved in carbonised food deposits on prehistoric pottery from the western Baltic dating from 6,100 cal BP to 5750 cal BP. Based on comparisons to over 120 European and Asian species, our observations are consistent with phytolith morphologies observed in modern garlic mustard seed (Alliaria petiolata (M. Bieb) Cavara & Grande). As this seed has a strong flavour, little nutritional value, and the phytoliths are found in pots along with terrestrial and marine animal residues, these findings are the first direct evidence for the spicing of food in European prehistoric cuisine. Our evidence suggests a much greater antiquity to the spicing of foods than is evident from the macrofossil record, and challenges the view that plants were exploited by hunter-gatherers and early agriculturalists solely for energy requirements, rather than taste.


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2007

Coast–inland mobility and diet in the Danish Mesolithic and Neolithic: evidence from stable isotope values of humans and dogs

Anders Fischer; Jesper Olsen; Michael P. Richards; Jan Heinemeier; Arny E. Sveinbjornsdottir; Pia Bennike


Radiocarbon | 2003

Freshwater Reservoir Effect in 14C Dates of Food Residue on Pottery

Anders Fischer; Jan Heinemeier


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2012

Carbon and nitrogen isotope signals in eel bone collagen from Mesolithic and Neolithic sites in northern Europe

Harry Kenneth Robson; Søren H. Andersen; Oliver E. Craig; Anders Fischer; Aikaterini Glykou; Sönke Hartz; Harald Lübke; Ulrich Schmölcke; Carl Heron


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2013

Dating the Trollesgave site and the Bromme culture – chronological fix-points for the Lateglacial settlement of Southern Scandinavia

Anders Fischer; Morten Fischer Mortensen; Peter Henriksen; Dorte Rørbeck Mathiassen; Jesper Olsen


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2015

A Late Glacial family at Trollesgave, Denmark

Randolph E. Donahue; Anders Fischer


The 81st Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology | 2016

Microwear and the Resolution of Post-Depositional Modification of Danish Underwater Mesolithic Deposits

Randolph E. Donahue; Daniela Burroni; Anders Fischer


The 80th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology | 2015

Trollesgave: Hunter-Gatherer Social Organisation during the Late Glacial in Northwest Europe

Randolph E. Donahue; Anders Fischer

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Carl Heron

University of Bradford

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