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Dive into the research topics where Helen Whelton is active.

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Featured researches published by Helen Whelton.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2014

Immediate replacement of fishing with dairying by the earliest farmers of the northeast Atlantic archipelagos

Lucy Cramp; Jennifer R. Jones; Alison Sheridan; Jessica Smyth; Helen Whelton; Jacqueline Mulville; Niall MacPherson Sharples; Richard P. Evershed

The appearance of farming, from its inception in the Near East around 12 000 years ago, finally reached the northwestern extremes of Europe by the fourth millennium BC or shortly thereafter. Various models have been invoked to explain the Neolithization of northern Europe; however, resolving these different scenarios has proved problematic due to poor faunal preservation and the lack of specificity achievable for commonly applied proxies. Here, we present new multi-proxy evidence, which qualitatively and quantitatively maps subsistence change in the northeast Atlantic archipelagos from the Late Mesolithic into the Neolithic and beyond. A model involving significant retention of hunter–gatherer–fisher influences was tested against one of the dominant adoptions of farming using a novel suite of lipid biomarkers, including dihydroxy fatty acids, ω-(o-alkylphenyl)alkanoic acids and stable carbon isotope signatures of individual fatty acids preserved in cooking vessels. These new findings, together with archaeozoological and human skeletal collagen bulk stable carbon isotope proxies, unequivocally confirm rejection of marine resources by early farmers coinciding with the adoption of intensive dairy farming. This pattern of Neolithization contrasts markedly to that occurring contemporaneously in the Baltic, suggesting that geographically distinct ecological and cultural influences dictated the evolution of subsistence practices at this critical phase of European prehistory.


Nature | 2015

Widespread exploitation of the honeybee by early neolithic farmers

Mélanie Roffet-Salque; Martine Regert; Richard P. Evershed; Alan K. Outram; Lucy Cramp; Orestes Decavallas; Julie Dunne; Pascale Gerbault; Simona Mileto; Sigrid Mirabaud; Mirva Pääkkönen; Jessica Smyth; Lucija Šoberl; Helen Whelton; Alfonso Alday-Ruiz; Henrik Asplund; Marta Bartkowiak; Eva Bayer-Niemeier; Lotfi Belhouchet; Federico Bernardini; Mihael Budja; Gabriel Cooney; Miriam Cubas; Ed M. Danaher; Mariana Diniz; László Domboróczki; Cristina Fabbri; Jésus E. González-Urquijo; Jean Guilaine; Slimane Hachi

The pressures on honeybee (Apis mellifera) populations, resulting from threats by modern pesticides, parasites, predators and diseases, have raised awareness of the economic importance and critical role this insect plays in agricultural societies across the globe. However, the association of humans with A. mellifera predates post-industrial-revolution agriculture, as evidenced by the widespread presence of ancient Egyptian bee iconography dating to the Old Kingdom (approximately 2400 bc). There are also indications of Stone Age people harvesting bee products; for example, honey hunting is interpreted from rock art in a prehistoric Holocene context and a beeswax find in a pre-agriculturalist site. However, when and where the regular association of A. mellifera with agriculturalists emerged is unknown. One of the major products of A. mellifera is beeswax, which is composed of a complex suite of lipids including n-alkanes, n-alkanoic acids and fatty acyl wax esters. The composition is highly constant as it is determined genetically through the insect’s biochemistry. Thus, the chemical ‘fingerprint’ of beeswax provides a reliable basis for detecting this commodity in organic residues preserved at archaeological sites, which we now use to trace the exploitation by humans of A. mellifera temporally and spatially. Here we present secure identifications of beeswax in lipid residues preserved in pottery vessels of Neolithic Old World farmers. The geographical range of bee product exploitation is traced in Neolithic Europe, the Near East and North Africa, providing the palaeoecological range of honeybees during prehistory. Temporally, we demonstrate that bee products were exploited continuously, and probably extensively in some regions, at least from the seventh millennium cal bc, likely fulfilling a variety of technological and cultural functions. The close association of A. mellifera with Neolithic farming communities dates to the early onset of agriculture and may provide evidence for the beginnings of a domestication process.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Regional asynchronicity in dairy production and processing in early farming communities of the northern Mediterranean

Cynthianne Debono Spiteri; Rosalind E. Gillis; Mélanie Roffet-Salque; Laura Castells Navarro; Jean Guilaine; Claire Manen; Italo M. Muntoni; Maria Saña Seguí; Dushka Urem-Kotsou; Helen Whelton; Oliver E. Craig; Jean-Denis Vigne; Richard P. Evershed

Significance This unique research combines the analyses of lipid residues in pottery vessels with slaughter profiles for domesticated ruminants to provide compelling evidence for diverse subsistence strategies in the northern Mediterranean basin during the Neolithic. Our findings show that the exploitation and processing of milk varied across the region, although most communities began to exploit milk as soon as domesticates were introduced between 9,000 and 7,000 y ago. This discovery is especially noteworthy as the shift in human subsistence toward milk production reshaped prehistoric European culture, biology, and economy in ways that are still visible today. In the absence of any direct evidence, the relative importance of meat and dairy productions to Neolithic prehistoric Mediterranean communities has been extensively debated. Here, we combine lipid residue analysis of ceramic vessels with osteo-archaeological age-at-death analysis from 82 northern Mediterranean and Near Eastern sites dating from the seventh to fifth millennia BC to address this question. The findings show variable intensities in dairy and nondairy activities in the Mediterranean region with the slaughter profiles of domesticated ruminants mirroring the results of the organic residue analyses. The finding of milk residues in very early Neolithic pottery (seventh millennium BC) from both the east and west of the region contrasts with much lower intensities in sites of northern Greece, where pig bones are present in higher frequencies compared with other locations. In this region, the slaughter profiles of all domesticated ruminants suggest meat production predominated. Overall, it appears that milk or the by-products of milk was an important foodstuff, which may have contributed significantly to the spread of these cultural groups by providing a nourishing and sustainable product for early farming communities.


Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports | 2017

From the inside out: Upscaling organic residue analyses of archaeological ceramics

Mélanie Roffet-Salque; Julie Dunne; David T Altoft; Emmanuelle Casanova; Lucy Cramp; Jessica Smyth; Helen Whelton; Richard P. Evershed

Abstract The investigation of organic residues associated with archaeological pottery using modern analytical chemical methods began in the 1970s. It was recognised early on that the analysis of lipids (i.e. fats, waxes and resins) preserved in surface residues or the fabric of single potsherds, representative of single vessels, was a powerful method for ascertaining pottery use, with a high degree of specificity. Subsequent developments saw a significant change in scale, with studies often involving lipid analyses of tens to hundreds of potsherds per archaeological assemblage, providing information that extended beyond pottery use. The identification of animal and plant foodstuffs processed in pots provides insights into herding and farming, and can also detect trade in exotic organic goods. Information about the environment and climate can be extrapolated from the isotopic composition of compounds detected in potsherds, potentially providing novel avenues of investigation. The direct dating of lipids in potsherds is opening up new opportunities for building archaeological chronologies, while the integration of lipid residue analyses with other environmental and cultural proxies within interdisciplinary projects is already providing unprecedented insights into past lifestyles, from site to regional scales.


Journal of The North Atlantic | 2015

Contrasting Patterns of Resource Exploitation on the Outer Hebrides and Northern Isles of Scotland during the Late Iron Age and Norse Period Revealed through Organic Residues in Pottery

Lucy Cramp; Helen Whelton; Niall MacPherson Sharples; Jacqui Mulville; Richard P. Evershed

Abstract This paper presents the findings from an investigation of organic residues extracted from pottery sherds from Late Iron Age and Norse phases from Bornais, South Uist, and the Late Norse period from Jarlshof on Shetland. These data confirm intensive and/or specialized processing of marine products in pottery on Shetland, either for consumption or other uses, such as rendering of oil from fish livers. In contrast, at Bornais, little increase in the intensity of marine product exploitation can be identified between the residues from the Later Iron Age and Norse phases; however, an emphasis on dairy products is identifiable throughout all phases and pottery types. While the findings from these two sites clearly cannot be extrapolated as entirely representative of the wider respective regions, what emerges is further evidence for diverse economic or cultural patterns at different locations within Scandinavian Scotland.


PaleoAmerica | 2018

New Research at Paisley Caves: Applying New Integrated Analytical Approaches to Understanding Stratigraphy, Taphonomy, and Site Formation Processes

Lisa-Marie Shillito; John C. Blong; Dennis L. Jenkins; Thomas W. Stafford; Helen Whelton; Katelyn McDonough; Ian D. Bull

ABSTRACT Paisley Caves in Oregon has become well known due to early dates, and human presence in the form of coprolites, found to contain ancient human DNA. Questions remain over whether the coprolites themselves are human, or whether the DNA is mobile in the sediments. This brief introduces new research applying an integrated analytical approach combining sediment micromorphology and lipid biomarker analysis, which aims to resolve these problems.


STAR: Science & Technology of Archaeological Research | 2017

Differing modes of animal exploitation in North-Pontic Eneolithic and Bronze Age Societies

Simona Mileto; Elke Kaiser; Yuri Rassamakin; Helen Whelton; Richard P. Evershed

ABSTRACT This paper presents new results of an interdisciplinary investigation of the diet and subsistence strategies of populations living in the North-Pontic region during the Eneolithic and the Early Bronze Age (ca. 3800 BC to the 2500 BC). New organic residue analyses of >200 sherds from five Eneolithic sites and two Early Bronze Age settlements are presented. The molecular and stable isotope results are discussed in relation to zooarchaeological evidence. Overall, the findings suggest that each community relied on either a hunting- or a husbandry-based subsistence strategy dependent upon the ecosystem in which they settled; horses and wild animals dominated subsistence in the forest-steppe communities in contrast to ruminant husbandry in the steppe.


Quaternary International | 2017

Strong bias towards carcass product processing at Neolithic settlements in northern Greece revealed through absorbed lipid residues of archaeological pottery

Helen Whelton; Mélanie Roffet-Salque; Kostas Kotsakis; Dushka Urem-Kotsou; Richard P. Evershed


The 82nd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology | 2018

Investigating the Nature and Timing of the Earliest Human Occupation of North America Using a Lipid Biomarker Approach

Helen Whelton; Lisa-Marie Shillito; Ian D. Bull


Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports | 2018

Strontium isotope evidence for human mobility in the Neolithic of northern Greece

Helen Whelton; Jamie Lewis; Paul Halstead; V. Isaakidou; Sevi Triantaphyllou; V. Tzevelekidi; Kostas Kotsakis; Richard P. Evershed

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Alison Sheridan

National Museums Scotland

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