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Featured researches published by Julia Best.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Questioning new answers regarding Holocene chicken domestication in China

Joris Peters; Ophélie Lebrasseur; Julia Best; Holly Miller; Tyr Fothergill; Keith Dobney; Richard M. Thomas; Mark Maltby; Naomi Sykes; Olivier Hanotte; Terry O’Connor; Matthew J. Collins; Greger Larson

Xiang et al. (1) assert that chickens were domesticated on the North China plain 10,000 y ago. Although a great deal remains unknown about the temporal and geographic origins of poultry husbandry, this claim is extraordinary. We welcome the increasing application of modern bioarcheological techniques to questions pertaining to animal domestication in China, but we are skeptical about these conclusions for several reasons.


STAR: Science & Technology of Archaeological Research | 2018

The identification of archaeological eggshell using peptide markers

Samantha Presslee; Julie Wilson; Jos Woolley; Julia Best; Douglas Russell; Anita Radini; R. Fischer; Benedikt M. Kessler; Rosa Boano; Matthew J. Collins; Beatrice Demarchi

ABSTRACT Avian eggshell survives well in alkaline and neutral soils, but its potential as an archaeological resource remains largely unexplored, mainly due to difficulties in its identification. Here we exploit the release of novel bird genomes and, for the first time on eggshell, use MALDI-ToF (matrix-assisted laser desorption ionisation-time of flight) mass spectrometry in combination with peptide sequencing by LC-MS/MS. The eggshell proteome is revealed as unexpectedly complex, with 5755 proteins identified for a reference collection comprising 23 bird species. We determined 782 m/z markers useful for eggshell identification, 583 of which could be assigned to known eggshell peptide sequences. These were used to identify eggshell fragments recovered from a medieval site at Freeschool Lane, Leicester. We discuss the specificity of the peptide markers and highlight the importance of assessing the level of taxonomic identification achievable for archaeological interpretation.


Environmental Archaeology | 2018

Multi-method Analysis of Avian Eggs as Grave Goods: Revealing Symbolism in Conversion Period Burials at Kukruse, NE Estonia

Tõnno Jonuks; Ester Oras; Julia Best; Beatrice Demarchi; Raivo Mänd; Samantha Presslee; Signe Vahur

ABSTRACT Eggshells are unusual finds in the Iron Age of eastern Europe (500 BC–1200 AD) deserving extra attention in terms of analysis as well as interpretation. This paper discusses two rare eggshell finds, discovered in female burials at the conversion period (12th–13th century AD) cemetery at Kukruse, NE Estonia. Our multianalytical study combining FT-IR, SEM(-EDS), microscopy and ZooMS provides an overview of methods applicable for identifying egg species, their predepositional history and curation. Based on the analytical results and the comparative analysis of the content and context of these two burials, we argue that different aims and connotations lay behind depositing eggs as burial goods, allowing well-supported interpretations of both pagan and Christian religious worldviews simultaneously.


International Journal of Osteoarchaeology | 2014

A Bird in the Hand: Data Collation and Novel Analysis of Avian Remains from South Uist, Outer Hebrides

Julia Best; Jacqueline Mulville


Archive | 2010

The fowling economies of the Shiant Isles, Outer Hebrides: resource exploitation in a marginal environment

Julia Best; Jacqueline Mulville


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2017

The identification of poultry processing in archaeological ceramic vessels using in-situ isotope references for organic residue analysis

André Carlo Colonese; Alexandre Lucquin; E.P. Guedes; Richard M. Thomas; Julia Best; B.T. Fothergill; Naomi Sykes; A. Foster; Holly Miller; K. Poole; Mark Maltby; M. Von Tersch; Oliver E. Craig


Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports | 2016

Birds from the water: Reconstructing avian resource use and contribution to diet in prehistoric Scottish Island environments

Julia Best; Jacqueline Mulville


Open Quaternary | 2017

Hens, Health and Husbandry: Integrated Approaches to Past Poultry-keeping in England

B. Tyr Fothergill; Julia Best; Alison Foster; Beatrice Demarchi


Archive | 2013

Living in liminality: an osteoarchaeological investigation into the use of avian resources in North Atlantic Island environments

Julia Best


Archive | 2013

Between the sea and sky: the archaeology of avian resource exploitation in Scottish island environments.

Julia Best; Jacqueline Mulville

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Mark Maltby

Bournemouth University

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Naomi Sykes

University of Nottingham

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Holly Miller

University of Nottingham

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