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3. Materials and Methods

Figure 1
Figure 1: Map showing the location of sites sampled

Teeth were sampled from 26 human skeletons from the Eindhoven cemetery, representing different time periods and preservation states. To minimise damage to the remains, loose teeth were sampled where available. Information on whether or not teeth were in situ within the jaw, or loose, is noted in Table 1, along with a summary of the sample descriptions. The site and the skeletal material are described in Hollund et al. (2012a). A cattle tooth was sampled from the Mesolithic causewayed enclosure site at Champ Durand in southern France. Here, large cattle bone assemblages were found in the ditches surrounding the enclosure (Feulner et al. 2012). Another set of teeth, three human and one cattle, was available from the Roman period cemetery in Castricum, the Netherlands. A description of this site can be found in Hollund et al. (2012b). Human teeth were also sampled from two environmentally very different sites; a recently excavated 16th-century cemetery in the city of Zwolle, the Netherlands and a Bronze Age burial on Sai island in the Nile river, Sudan (Nubia). The site locations are shown in Figure 1.

Table 1: Sample descriptions (see also Table 2)
Sample no. Archaeological code Site, country Period Taxon Anatomy In situ in jaw? Notes
EIN-01 3993 Eindhoven, NL 1500-1650 AD Human 3rd molar, lower right Yes Cross-cut by other burial
EIN-02 4125 Eindhoven, NL 1500-1650 AD Human 2nd molar, lower right Yes Excellent macroscopic preservation
EIN-03 4214 Eindhoven, NL 1200-1350 AD Human Incisor No Cross-cut by other burial
EIN-04 4359 Eindhoven, NL 1200-1350 AD Human Premolar? No Cross-cut by other burial
EIN-05 1390 Eindhoven, NL 1650-1850 AD Human Molar No Child
EIN-06 2179 Eindhoven, NL 1650-1850 AD Human M3, upper. Yes
EIN-07 4132 Eindhoven, NL 1500-1650 AD Human M1, lower left Yes Excellent macroscopic preservation
EIN-08 4217 Eindhoven, NL 1350-1500 AD Human Canine, upper right Yes
EIN-09 4055 Eindhoven, NL 1350-1500 AD Human M2, lower right No Cross-cut by church wall
EIN-10 3521 Eindhoven, NL 1200-1350 AD Human M3, upper, right Yes
EIN-11 4291 Eindhoven, NL 1200-1350 AD Human Molar No Poor macroscopic preservation
EIN-12 3426 Eindhoven, NL 1650-1850 AD Human Canine, lower left Yes
EIN-13 3857 Eindhoven, NL 1200-1350 AD Human M3, lower, right No Poor macroscopic preservation
EIN-14 3793 Eindhoven, NL 1350-1500 AD Human ?Canine, lower left Yes Poor macroscopic preservation
EIN-15 4062 Eindhoven, NL 1500-1650 AD Human 2nd premolar, upper left Yes
EIN-16 3864 Eindhoven, NL 1500-1650 AD Human M2, lower left Yes
EIN-17B 3648 Eindhoven, NL 1350-1500 AD Human Molar No Poorly preserved, some parts only silhouette
EIN-17C 3648 Eindhoven, NL 1350-1500 AD Human Molar No Poorly preserved, some parts only silhouette
EIN-18 1723 Eindhoven, NL 1350-1500 AD Human M3 Yes
EIN-19 2108 Eindhoven, NL 1650-1850 AD Human Central incisor, right, upper No Excellent macroscopic preservation
EIN-20 2165 Eindhoven, NL 1650-1850 AD Human Molar Yes
EIN-21 4298 Eindhoven, NL 1200-1350 AD Human M1, lower right No Child, 7 yr old
EIN-22 3242 Eindhoven, NL 1350-1500 AD Human M2, lower left No information Excellent macroscopic preservation
EIN-23 3530 Eindhoven, NL 1650-1850 AD Human M2, lower left No information
EIN-24 3821 Eindhoven, NL 1500-1650 AD Human M2, lower right No information Coffin wood preserved
EIN-49 4360 Eindhoven, NL 1200-1350 AD Human nd No Child, no root development
CAS-01 S4 9-2-54 Sp157 Castricum, NL Roman period Human 4.4 (lower right) No information Double shallow pit burial in cemetery. Cross-cut by medieval ditch, only legs in situ
CAS-11 S114 4-1-1 Sp8 Castricum, NL Roman period Cattle nd No Possibly dumped carcass, deliberately buried
CAS-07 S148 3-1-117 Sp80 Castricum, NL Roman period Human Tooth 4.7 (lower right) No information Individual shallow pit burial. No visible disturbance
CAS-08 S138 3-3-331 Sp63 Castricum, NL Roman period Human nd No information Inhumation. In refuse pit
CDU-15 CDU 78 FIII A2 -130 CP 3.5.1.32 Champ Durand, FR Mesolithic Cattle nd No
SAI-04 Sp 409 Sai Island, the Nile, Sudan Bronze Age Human nd Yes
ZWO-01 Vnr 13 12 Apostelen Zwolle, NL 14th-15th cent. AD Human Tooth 3.6 Yes

The teeth were prepared as thin-sections for light microscopy. Three samples were also prepared as polished blocks for scanning electron microscopy (SEM), which allowed chemical analyses by energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDX). Sample preparation protocols and analytical equipment is described in Hollund et al. (2012b) and Hollund (2013), but in short involved impregnation with a two-component epoxy and using a grinding machine equipped with a diamond grinding wheel to produce thin-sections. The SEM-EDX equipment used was a JEOL JSM-59101V fitted with an EDS detector from Thermo Scientific and Noran System Seven software.