PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

The Age of Feasting: Late Bronze Age networks developed through massive food festivals, with animals brought from far and wide

Cutting-edge analysis of animal bones found in ancient rubbish heaps shows the distances people travelled with their animals

2025-09-09
(Press-News.org) Middens, massive prehistoric rubbish heaps which became part of the British landscape, are revealing the distances people travelled to feast together at the end of the Bronze Age.

In the largest study of its kind, archaeologists from Cardiff University used cutting-edge isotope analysis on material found within six middens in Wiltshire and the Thames Valley.

The results, which reveal where the animals that were feasted on were raised, shed light on the catchment of these vast feasts, arguably the largest to take place in Britain until the medieval period.

Middens are enormous mounds of debris left from these gatherings, some of which became hillocks in the landscape over time. The largest, Potterne in Wiltshire, covers an area of approximately five football pitches and is packed with feasting remains, including as many as 15 million bone fragments.

At Potterne, pork was the meat of choice, with pigs coming from a wide catchment, even as far as northern England. The breadth of results from this location indicates animals came from multiple regions – suggesting it was a meeting place for producers from locally and beyond. Similarly, Runnymede in Surrey was a major regional hub, but here it was cattle that were drawn from a distance.

In contrast, East Chisenbury, a monumental mound 10 miles from Stonehenge, estimated to contain the remains of hundreds of thousands of animals, was overwhelmingly dominated by sheep. Unlike the other middens studied, the new research shows that the majority of these animals came from the surrounding landscape.

Lead author Dr Carmen Esposito, who was based at Cardiff University’s School of History, Archaeology and Religion when the research was carried out and is now at the University of Bologna, said:  “Our findings show each midden had a distinct make up of animal remains, with some full of locally raised sheep and others with pigs or cattle from far and wide.

“We believe this demonstrates that each midden was a lynchpin in the landscape, key to sustaining specific regional economies, expressing identities and sustaining relations between communities during this turbulent period, when the value of bronze dropped and people turned to farming instead.”

Multi-isotope analysis is a rapidly developing scientific method in archaeology. Each geographical area has a different chemical make-up, distinct to its environment and this permeates into the water and food grown there. As animals eat and drink, these regional markers remain locked in their bones, allowing researchers to trace where they were reared centuries later.

Co-author of the study, Professor Richard Madgwick, also based at the University’s School of History, Archaeology and Religion, said: “At a time of climatic and economic instability, people in southern Britain turned to feasting – there was perhaps a feasting age between the Bronze and Iron Age. These events are powerful for building and consolidating relationships both within and between communities, today and in the past. The scale of these accumulations of debris and their wide catchment is astonishing and points to communal consumption and social mobilisation on a scale that is arguably unparalleled in British prehistory.

“Overall, the research points to the dynamic networks that were anchored on feasting events during this period and the different,  perhaps complementary, roles that each midden had at the Bronze Age-Iron Age transition.”

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Study of breast cell changes in motherhood provides clues to breastfeeding difficulties

2025-09-09
In a study in mice, researchers have identified genes associated with the dramatic transformation of the mammary gland in pregnancy, breastfeeding, and after breastfeeding as it returns to its resting state. Their results form the most detailed atlas of genetic expression ever produced for the adult developmental cycle of the mammary gland. They are published today in the journal Nucleic Acids Research. The mammary gland is made up of different cell types, each with a different function - such as fat cells that provide structural support, and basal cells that are crucial for milk ejection. The ...

Seizure spread marks loss of consciousness

2025-09-09
Seizure spread marks loss of consciousness Loss of consciousness can pose real dangers for people with seizure disorders. And while not all seizures cause loss of consciousness, Yale researchers have now discovered how one common type of seizures do. Frontal lobe seizures are classified as “focal” seizures, a subtype in which the problematic activity generates in a single region of the brain. In the case of frontal lobe seizures, activity originates in the brain’s frontal lobes, located behind the forehead.  But while some cause loss of consciousness, others don’t. The reason, researchers found, is that ...

Carlos Collet, MD, Ph.D., joins CRF® as director, cardiovascular imaging, physiology and translational therapeutics

2025-09-09
NEW YORK – September 9, 2025 – The Cardiovascular Research Foundation® (CRF®) is proud to announce the appointment of Dr. Carlos Collet as Director, Cardiovascular Imaging, Physiology and Translational Therapeutics. A globally recognized interventional cardiologist and imaging expert, Dr. Collet will spearhead efforts to accelerate the integration of cutting-edge research into clinical practice, elevate CRF®’s academic contributions, and expand its global leadership in cardiovascular education. His work will unify translational science, technological innovation, and education to advance ...

Beyond weight loss: How healthy eating cuts chronic pain

2025-09-09
We all know the benefits of a healthy diet. But new research from the University of South Australia shows that eating nutritious food is about far more than ticking off the five food groups – it can also significantly reduce chronic pain.   In a weight-loss study of 104 Australian adults living with overweight or obesity, researchers found that people who improved their diet quality over a three-month period reported far less joint and muscle pain, with the benefits not simply explained by weight lost.   The findings challenge common assumptions that weight loss is the ...

Mayo Clinic physician awarded Dr. Scott C. Goodwin Grant for Adenomyosis

2025-09-09
FAIRFAX, VA (Sept. 3, 2025)—The Society of Interventional Radiology (SIR) Foundation is proud to announce that Wendaline M. VanBuren, M.D., a radiologist at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, has been awarded the Dr. Scott C. Goodwin Grant for Adenomyosis. Through this award, SIR Foundation will provide funding over two years to support Dr. VanBuren’s study, “Endo-Deep: An AI-Powered Model for Diagnosis and Treatment Planning in Adenomyosis and Endometriosis.” “This multifunctional AI model represents a transformative diagnostic pipeline for endometriosis and adenomyosis, offering ...

Kennesaw State researcher developing electronic nose to detect foodborne illness

2025-09-09
The presence of a strong, unpleasant odor in food is an indication that bacteria has contaminated the food past the point of human consumption. However, oftentimes pathogens such as salmonella and E. coli are difficult to detect. Taeyeong Choi, assistant professor of information technology in Kennesaw State University’s College of Computing and Software Engineering, is working on developing an electronic nose (e-nose) to detect abnormalities from their version of the sniff test.  His proposed method would not only eliminate the need to “waste” food to discern whether it ...

New global database opens the door for better understanding of terrestrial ecosystem productivity

2025-09-09
With CMCC’s contribution a new study and database provides scientists with an unprecedented resource for understanding how Earth's land systems store carbon and produce biomass, establishing a benchmark for calibrating vegetation models and assessing ecosystem responses to environmental change. Net primary production (NPP) represents the carbon accumulated by plants through photosynthesis after accounting for their own respiration - essentially the amount of biomass ecosystems produce annually. This fundamental measurement underpins our understanding of global ...

Surviving hostile Venus conditions, finding rare earths and other critical metals

2025-09-09
Whether helping create an alloy that can withstand the withering conditions of Venus in partnership with NASA or collaborating with the National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL) to develop a portable sensor that can identify rare earth elements (REE), the University of Pittsburgh Swanson School of Engineering’s Paul Ohodnicki is fueling innovative research while solving problems both in space and right here on Earth. R&D World has recognized Ohodnicki and his team of collaborators with 2025 R&D 100 Awards, this year for two emerging technologies: VulcanAlloy and ...

New ways of producing methanol from electricity and biomass

2025-09-09
In future, it could become easier to manufacture methanol from biomass decentrally on site. Researchers at Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg (FAU) are proposing a method with which raw and waste materials from plants can be processed in a self-contained procedure under mild reaction conditions. This method means that the complex drying and transportation of biomass to large biomass gasification plants becomes superfluous. The results were published in the journal Green Chemistry. Methanol is a versatile basic chemical and promising energy carrier – for example, as a drop-in fuel that can be used directly in ...

Gemini South aids in discovery of elusive cloud-forming chemical on ancient brown dwarf

2025-09-09
Brown dwarfs are peculiar objects that are too massive to be considered planets, but not massive enough to sustain nuclear fusion like a star. Among this curious class of objects, a brown dwarf nicknamed The Accident stands out for its unique mix of physical features, exhibiting characteristics previously seen only in warm, young brown dwarfs and others previously seen only in cool, ancient ones. The Accident’s properties are highly unusual compared to all other known stars and brown ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Giant DNA discovered hiding in your mouth

Children lose muscle during early cancer treatment — new ECU study warns of a hidden danger to recovery 

World-first koala chlamydia vaccine approved

Taking the pulse of digital health in Asia

Even healthy children can be severely affected by RSV

Keto diet linked to reduced depression symptoms in college students

Blood test identifies HPV-associated head and neck cancers up to 10 years before symptoms

Odds of dementia strongly linked to number of co-existing mental health disorders

Large social and economic inequalities persist among UK doctors

Research reveals how microplastics threaten Gulf of Mexico marine life

AI tool developed at Oxford helps astronomers find supernovae in a sky full of noise

Hungry star is eating its cosmic twin at rate never seen before

The Age of Feasting: Late Bronze Age networks developed through massive food festivals, with animals brought from far and wide

Study of breast cell changes in motherhood provides clues to breastfeeding difficulties

Seizure spread marks loss of consciousness

Carlos Collet, MD, Ph.D., joins CRF® as director, cardiovascular imaging, physiology and translational therapeutics

Beyond weight loss: How healthy eating cuts chronic pain

Mayo Clinic physician awarded Dr. Scott C. Goodwin Grant for Adenomyosis

Kennesaw State researcher developing electronic nose to detect foodborne illness

New global database opens the door for better understanding of terrestrial ecosystem productivity

Surviving hostile Venus conditions, finding rare earths and other critical metals

New ways of producing methanol from electricity and biomass

Gemini South aids in discovery of elusive cloud-forming chemical on ancient brown dwarf

UIC researchers awarded $8.3M federal grant to study alcohol use disorder

NCCN Policy Summit explores whether artificial intelligence can transform cancer care safely and fairly

Mitcham receives funding to strengthen food as medicine pathways in southwest Virginia

PCORI awards new patient-centered CER to support informed health care decisions

Global integration of traditional and modern medicine: policy developments, regulatory frameworks, and clinical integration model

How to find a cryptic animal: Recording the elusive beaked whale in the Foz do Amazonas Basin

Long COVID and food insecurity in US adults, 2022-2023

[Press-News.org] The Age of Feasting: Late Bronze Age networks developed through massive food festivals, with animals brought from far and wide
Cutting-edge analysis of animal bones found in ancient rubbish heaps shows the distances people travelled with their animals