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Infant feeding and weaning practices in Roman...
Journal article

Infant feeding and weaning practices in Roman Egypt

Abstract

Current knowledge of infant feeding and weaning practices during the Roman period in Egypt is limited to scanty documentary and iconographic evidence. Stable nitrogen and carbon isotope analysis provides another avenue to explore this question. A sample of 49 infant and juvenile human skeletal remains from the Kellis 2 cemetery in the Dakhleh Oasis, Egypt, was used to determine patterns of infant feeding and weaning. delta(15)N values indicate that supplementary foods were introduced at around 6 months of age, and that weaning was complete by 3 years of age. By 6 months of age, delta(13)C values become increasingly enriched over adult values, and reach peak enrichment at approximately 1.5 years of age. Beyond this age, delta(13)C gradually declines to approach adult values. This enrichment in infant delta(13)C values is indicative of consumption of (13)C-enriched supplementary foods. Based on isotopic study of faunal and botanical remains from the ancient village of Kellis, we conclude that at approximately 6 months of age, infants were fed milk of goat and/or cow.

Authors

Dupras TL; Schwarcz HP; Fairgrieve SI

Journal

American Journal of Biological Anthropology, Vol. 115, No. 3, pp. 204–212

Publisher

Wiley

Publication Date

July 20, 2001

DOI

10.1002/ajpa.1075

ISSN

0002-9483

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