Abstract
Radiocarbon measurements on a partially articulated female human skeleton, recovered from the foreshore of the river Thames in London, raised interesting questions of interpretation when the body did not produce the anticipated Neolithic date. A relatively recent 14C age and a strong marine component to the individual's diet, identified by stable isotope measurements, means that the date of death is difficult to estimate accurately, although the body probably does not constitute a forensic case.
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CITATION STYLE
Bayliss, A., Marshall, P., & Sidell, J. (2004). A puzzling body from the river Thames in London. In Radiocarbon (Vol. 46, pp. 285–291). University of Arizona. https://doi.org/10.1017/S003382220003959X
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