Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where David Orton is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by David Orton.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Data Sharing Reveals Complexity in the Westward Spread of Domestic Animals across Neolithic Turkey

Benjamin S. Arbuckle; Sarah Whitcher Kansa; Eric Kansa; David Orton; Canan Çakirlar; Lionel Gourichon; Levent Atici; Alfred Galik; Arkadiusz Marciniak; Jacqui Mulville; Hijlke Buitenhuis; Denise Carruthers; Bea De Cupere; Arzu Demirergi; Sheelagh Frame; Daniel Helmer; Louise Martin; Joris Peters; Nadja Pöllath; Kamilla Pawłowska; Nerissa Russell; Katheryn C. Twiss; Doris Würtenberger

This study presents the results of a major data integration project bringing together primary archaeozoological data for over 200,000 faunal specimens excavated from seventeen sites in Turkey spanning the Epipaleolithic through Chalcolithic periods, c. 18,000-4,000 cal BC, in order to document the initial westward spread of domestic livestock across Neolithic central and western Turkey. From these shared datasets we demonstrate that the westward expansion of Neolithic subsistence technologies combined multiple routes and pulses but did not involve a set ‘package’ comprising all four livestock species including sheep, goat, cattle and pig. Instead, Neolithic animal economies in the study regions are shown to be more diverse than deduced previously using quantitatively more limited datasets. Moreover, during the transition to agro-pastoral economies interactions between domestic stock and local wild fauna continued. Through publication of datasets with Open Context (opencontext.org), this project emphasizes the benefits of data sharing and web-based dissemination of large primary data sets for exploring major questions in archaeology (Alternative Language Abstract S1).


PLOS ONE | 2011

Stable Isotope Evidence for Late Medieval (14th–15th C) Origins of the Eastern Baltic Cod (Gadus morhua) Fishery

David Orton; Daniel Makowiecki; Tessa de Roo; Cluny Johnstone; Jennifer Harland; Leif Jonsson; Dirk Heinrich; Inge Bødker Enghoff; Lembi Lõugas; Wim Van Neer; A. Ervynck; Anne Karin Hufthammer; Colin Amundsen; Andrew K.G. Jones; Alison Locker; Sheila Hamilton-Dyer; Peter E. Pope; Brian R. MacKenzie; Michael P. Richards; Tamsin C. O'Connell; James H. Barrett

Although recent historical ecology studies have extended quantitative knowledge of eastern Baltic cod (Gadus morhua) exploitation back as far as the 16th century, the historical origin of the modern fishery remains obscure. Widespread archaeological evidence for cod consumption around the eastern Baltic littoral emerges around the 13th century, three centuries before systematic documentation, but it is not clear whether this represents (1) development of a substantial eastern Baltic cod fishery, or (2) large-scale importation of preserved cod from elsewhere. To distinguish between these hypotheses we use stable carbon and nitrogen isotope analysis to determine likely catch regions of 74 cod vertebrae and cleithra from 19 Baltic archaeological sites dated from the 8th to the 16th centuries. δ13C and δ15N signatures for six possible catch regions were established using a larger sample of archaeological cod cranial bones (n = 249). The data strongly support the second hypothesis, revealing widespread importation of cod during the 13th to 14th centuries, most of it probably from Arctic Norway. By the 15th century, however, eastern Baltic cod dominate within our sample, indicating the development of a substantial late medieval fishery. Potential human impact on cod stocks in the eastern Baltic must thus be taken into account for at least the last 600 years.


European Journal of Archaeology | 2012

Herding, Settlement, and Chronology in the Balkan Neolithic

David Orton

AbstractThe Neolithic in the central Balkans saw dramatic changes in settlement forms, architecture, and material culture, with substantial, often long-lived settlements that can reasonably be called villages emerging in the later part of the period. This paper examines the role of herding practices in the development of these large, more-or-less settled communities. Radiocarbon results (including twenty-seven new AMS dates from Gomolava, Opovo, and Petnica) are used to place the available zooarchaeological data into a chronological framework, allowing comparison of inter- and intra-site changes across the region. The data point to the development of large-scale cattle herding in the later Neolithic, the implications of which for mobility and community cohesion are discussed. This trend is seen clearly over time at certain sites but, like the settlement evidence, is neither universal nor synchronous across the region, emphasizing that change occurred, and should be understood, on the level of individual c...


Antiquity | 2014

Fish for the city: meta-analysis of archaeological cod remains and the growth of London's northern trade

David Orton; James Morris; Alison Locker; James H. Barrett

The growth of medieval cities in Northern Europe placed new demands on food supply, and led to the import of fish from increasingly distant fishing grounds. Quantitative analysis of cod remains from London provides revealing insight into the changing patterns of supply that can be related to known historical events and circumstances. In particular it identifies a marked increase in imported cod from the thirteenth century AD. That trend continued into the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, after a short downturn, perhaps attributable to the impact of the Black Death, in the mid fourteenth century. The detailed pattern of fluctuating abundance illustrates the potential of archaeological information that is now available from the high-quality urban excavations conducted in London and similar centres during recent decades.


World Archaeology | 2010

Both subject and object: herding, inalienability and sentient property in prehistory

David Orton

Abstract This paper advocates a social approach to domestic animals in prehistory, one which situates herding practices in their (human) social context while also recognizing the status of animals of social beings in their own right. Domestic animals, it is argued, represent sentient property in the sense that, despite being incorporated as ‘objects’ into property relations between humans they remain subjects whose social world overlaps with that of humans. This tension between the status of domestic animals as subject and as object is played out in highly context-specific ways, being linked both to human social organization and to material/geographical aspects of herding practices. These ideas are used to develop a model for the role of cattle in a process of social change that took place during the later Neolithic Vinča period in the central Balkans.


Royal Society Open Science | 2015

The globalization of naval provisioning: Ancient DNA and stable isotope analyses of stored cod from the wreck of the Mary Rose, AD 1545

William F. Hutchinson; Mark Culling; David Orton; Bernd Hänfling; Lori Lawson Handley; Sheila Hamilton-Dyer; Tamsin C. O'Connell; Michael P. Richards; James H. Barrett

A comparison of ancient DNA (single-nucleotide polymorphisms) and carbon and nitrogen stable isotope evidence suggests that stored cod provisions recovered from the wreck of the Tudor warship Mary Rose, which sank in the Solent, southern England, in 1545, had been caught in northern and transatlantic waters such as the northern North Sea and the fishing grounds of Iceland and Newfoundland. This discovery, underpinned by control data from archaeological samples of cod bones from potential source regions, illuminates the role of naval provisioning in the early development of extensive sea fisheries, with their long-term economic and ecological impacts.


Science | 2018

Ancient goat genomes reveal mosaic domestication in the Fertile Crescent

Kevin G. Daly; Pierpaolo Maisano Delser; Victoria Mullin; Amelie Scheu; Valeria Mattiangeli; Matthew D. Teasdale; Andrew J. Hare; Joachim Burger; Marta Pereira Verdugo; Matthew J. Collins; Ron Kehati; Cevdet Merih Erek; Guy Bar-Oz; François Pompanon; Tristan Cumer; Canan Çakirlar; Azadeh Fatemeh Mohaseb; Delphine Decruyenaere; Hossein Davoudi; Özlem Çevik; Gary O. Rollefson; Jean-Denis Vigne; Roya Khazaeli; Homa Fathi; Sanaz Beizaee Doost; Roghayeh Rahimi Sorkhani; Ali Akbar Vahdati; Eberhard Sauer; Hossein Azizi Kharanaghi; Sepideh Maziar

How humans got their goats Little is known regarding the location and mode of the early domestication of animals such as goats for husbandry. To investigate the history of the goat, Daly et al. sequenced mitochondrial and nuclear sequences from ancient specimens ranging from hundreds to thousands of years in age. Multiple wild populations contributed to the origin of modern goats during the Neolithic. Over time, one mitochondrial type spread and became dominant worldwide. However, at the whole-genome level, modern goat populations are a mix of goats from different sources and provide evidence for a multilocus process of domestication in the Near East. Furthermore, the patterns described support the idea of multiple dispersal routes out of the Fertile Crescent region by domesticated animals and their human counterparts. Science, this issue p. 85 Ancient goat genomes elucidate a dispersed domestication process across the Near East. Current genetic data are equivocal as to whether goat domestication occurred multiple times or was a singular process. We generated genomic data from 83 ancient goats (51 with genome-wide coverage) from Paleolithic to Medieval contexts throughout the Near East. Our findings demonstrate that multiple divergent ancient wild goat sources were domesticated in a dispersed process that resulted in genetically and geographically distinct Neolithic goat populations, echoing contemporaneous human divergence across the region. These early goat populations contributed differently to modern goats in Asia, Africa, and Europe. We also detect early selection for pigmentation, stature, reproduction, milking, and response to dietary change, providing 8000-year-old evidence for human agency in molding genome variation within a partner species.


Antiquity | 2018

A tale of two tells: dating the Çatalhöyük West Mound

David Orton; Jana Anvari; Catriona Gibson; Amy Bogaard; Eva Rosenstock; Peter F. Biehl

Abstract Çatalhöyük is one of the most well-known and important Neolithic/Chalcolithic sites in the Middle East. Settlement at the site encompasses two separate tell mounds known as Çatalhöyük East and West, with the focus of attention having traditionally been upon what is often regarded as the main site, the earlier East Mound. Limitations of dating evidence have, however, rendered the nature of the relationship between the settlements on these mounds unclear. Traditional models favoured a hiatus between their occupation, or, alternatively, a rapid shift from one site to the other, often invoking changes in natural conditions by way of an explanation. New dates challenge these theories, and indicate a potentially significant overlap between the occupation of the mounds, starting in the late seventh millennium BC.


Nature Communications | 2018

Ancient proteins from ceramic vessels at Çatalhöyük West reveal the hidden cuisine of early farmers

Jessica Hendy; André Carlo Colonese; Ingmar Franz; Ricardo Fernandes; R. Fischer; David Orton; Alexandre Lucquin; Luke Spindler; Jana Anvari; Elizabeth Stroud; Peter F. Biehl; Camilla Speller; Nicole Boivin; Meaghan Mackie; Rosa Rakownikow Jersie-Christensen; J. Olsen; Matthew J. Collins; Oliver E. Craig; Eva Rosenstock

The analysis of lipids (fats, oils and waxes) absorbed within archaeological pottery has revolutionized the study of past diets and culinary practices. However, this technique can lack taxonomic and tissue specificity and is often unable to disentangle signatures resulting from the mixing of different food products. Here, we extract ancient proteins from ceramic vessels from the West Mound of the key early farming site of Çatalhöyük in Anatolia, revealing that this community processed mixes of cereals, pulses, dairy and meat products, and that particular vessels may have been reserved for specialized foods (e.g., cow milk and milk whey). Moreover, we demonstrate that dietary proteins can persist on archaeological artefacts for at least 8000 years, and that this approach can reveal past culinary practices with more taxonomic and tissue-specific clarity than has been possible with previous biomolecular techniques.Ancient diets have been reconstructed from archaeological pottery based on lipid remains, but these can lack specificity. Here, Hendy and colleagues analyze ancient proteins from ceramic vessels up to 8000 years old to produce a more nuanced understanding of ancient food processing and diet.


Archive | 2016

Archaeology as a Tool for Understanding Past Marine Resource Use and Its Impact

David Orton

As the study of material traces of past human activity, archaeology straddles the sciences and humanities. Alongside time depth, often stretching back thousands of years, it is this intersection between environmental and cultural evidence that confers archaeology’s unique potential as a tool for understanding past marine resource use and its impact on ecosystems. In this context, the specialist discipline of zooarchaeology falls somewhere between palaeontology and environmental history: animal remains from archaeological sites represent data on past animal populations viewed through a filter of human activity, but this filter is also the object of study since it constitutes evidence for exploitation of those populations.

Collaboration


Dive into the David Orton's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

James Morris

University of Central Lancashire

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge