Federico Lugli

Federico Lugli
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Federico verified their affiliation via an institutional email.
Verified
Federico verified their affiliation via an institutional email.
  • PhD Geochemistry
  • Professor (Associate) at University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

About

141
Publications
45,878
Reads
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1,608
Citations
Introduction
I use isotopes and proteins of ancient skeletal remains to disentangle human and animal life histories in the past.
Current institution
University of Modena and Reggio Emilia
Current position
  • Professor (Associate)
Additional affiliations
August 2023 - October 2024
Goethe University Frankfurt
Position
  • PostDoc Position
Description
  • MSCA-IF | Project "AROUSE" - Assessing the impact of climate fluctuations on hibeRnation phenOlogy USing novel dEntal biomarkers
March 2018 - July 2023
University of Bologna
Position
  • PostDoc Position
Description
  • http://www.erc-success.eu/
September 2016 - October 2016
Max Planck Institute for Chemistry
Position
  • Visiting PhD Student
Education
October 2014 - March 2018
University of Modena and Reggio Emilia
Field of study
  • Geochemistry
October 2012 - July 2014
University of Ferrara
Field of study
  • Biological Anthropology and Prehistoric Archaeology
October 2009 - July 2012
University of Modena and Reggio Emilia
Field of study
  • Cultural Heritage

Publications

Publications (141)
Article
Full-text available
Understanding the reason(s) behind changes in human mobility strategies through space and time is a major challenge in palaeoanthropology. Most of the time this is due to the lack of suitable temporal sequences of human skeletal specimens during critical climatic or cultural shifts. Here, we present temporal variations in the Sr isotope composition...
Article
Full-text available
Recent work has disclosed the critical role played by enamel peptides in sex classification of old skeletal remains. In particular, protein AMELY (amelogenin isoform Y) is present in the enamel dental tissue of male individuals only, while AMELX (isoform X) can be found in both sexes. AMELY can be easily detected by LC-MS/MS in the ion extracted ch...
Article
Significance The extent to which Neanderthals differ from us is the focus of many studies in human evolution. There is debate about their pace of growth and early-life metabolic constraints, both of which are still poorly understood. Here we use chemical and isotopic patterns in tandem with enamel growth rates of three Neanderthal milk teeth from n...
Article
Full-text available
We present a novel database of biological and geological ⁸⁷Sr/⁸⁶Sr values (n = 1920) from Italy, using literature data and newly analysed samples, for provenance purposes. We collected both bioavailable and non-bioavailable (i.e. rocks and bulk soils) data to attain a broader view of the Sr isotope variability of the Italian territory. These data w...
Article
Full-text available
The study of spatial (paleo)ecology in mammals is critical to understand how animals adapt to and exploit their environment. In this work we analysed the ⁸⁷Sr/⁸⁶Sr, δ¹⁸O and δ¹³C isotope composition of 65 moose bone and antler samples from Sweden from wild-shot individuals dated between 1800 and 1994 to study moose mobility and feeding behaviour fo...
Article
Fault-related diagenesis critically influences the petrophysical and mechanical properties of fault zones, affecting fluid circulation and seismicity in the upper crust. Questions remain about the composition of the mineralizing fluids and the role of fault architecture in controlling the distribution of hydrothermal silicification. This study addr...
Preprint
Full-text available
Alpine Upper Palaeolithic contexts exhibit specialised subsistence strategies, heavily dependent on Capra ibex. Among them, the rock shelter Riparo Dalmeri stands out, with C. Ibex dominating faunal remains across all occupation phases, spanning the Pleistocene/Holocene transition. This evidence positions Riparo Dalmeri as a key site for exploring...
Conference Paper
In the territory of Civitella d'Agliano (VT, Lazio), at the site today called Castel Sozzio, excavation campaigns from 1997-1998 and 2020-2023 brought to light a funerary complex of great importance, as it is the only investigated one in the Tiber Valley for this chronological period. The burials, many of which were reused several times, show diffe...
Article
Full-text available
Background Disruption in odontogenesis can influence the normal development of both deciduous and permanent dentition resulting in anomalies in morphology, number, and position of teeth. Although dental anomalies are frequently reported in clinical practice, their occurrence in past populations from archeological contexts is rarely acknowledged. A...
Article
Full-text available
Understanding the growth patterns and developmental trajectories of teeth during early life stages provides valuable insights into the ontogeny of individuals, particularly in archaeological populations where such information is scarce. This study focuses on first deciduous molars, specifically investigating crown formation times and daily secretio...
Article
Full-text available
The biological aspects of infancy within late Upper Palaeolithic populations and the role of southern refugia at the end of the Last Glacial Maximum are not yet fully understood. This study presents a multidisciplinary, high temporal resolution investigation of an Upper Palaeolithic infant from Grotta delle Mura (Apulia, southern Italy) combining p...
Presentation
Full-text available
The Mani peninsula in the southern part of Peloponnese is an area with numerus archaeological sites yielding Palaeolithic artifacts and skeletal remains of animals as well as hominins. The Upper Pleistocene sediments of Melitzia Cave comprise Gravettian and Epigravettian cultural layers containing skeletal remains of three ruminant taxa (Capra ibex...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
One of the most extensively researched Palaeolithic topics revolves around the disappearance of Neanderthals and the subsequent expansion of anatomically modern humans (AMH). This pivotal shift, knowns as ‘Middle to Upper Palaeolithic Transition’ was of particular significance in Southern Europe, where Neanderthal populations survived longer and, a...
Article
Full-text available
Cremation was a very common ritual in ancient Roman funerary traditions. However, the study of cremated human remains has always been complex and challenging, which has often led to an imbalance in data recording between inhumations and cremations. In this work, we study 14 cremation burials from two different urban cemeteries in the Roman city of...
Preprint
Full-text available
Understanding the growth patterns and developmental trajectories of teeth during early life stages provides valuable insights into the ontogeny of individuals, particularly in archaeological populations where such information is scarce. This study focuses on first deciduous molars, specifically investigating crown formation times and daily secretio...
Article
Full-text available
During the Bronze and Iron Age, Sardinia was home of one of the most technologically advanced Mediterranean societies (the Nuragic culture). Given its key geographical location, the island was also the fulcrum of deep cultural exchanges. Toward the end of the Iron Age, Phoenicians, and especially Carthaginians and Romans, massively frequented Sardi...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
Faunal assemblages from archaeological contexts often consist of highly fragmented osseous remains which can be a limiting factor for the purposes of standard archaeozoological analysis. Therefore, efforts to further improve our knowledge of human—animal relationships in the past have been intensified in the last few decades. Apart from the already...
Article
Full-text available
This study analyzes high-grade carbonate rocks from several strategic deposits in the Arabian Peninsula and neighboring countries. The rocks are used locally for quicklime and dololime production in twin-shaft regenerative kilns. Stable C-O-Sr isotopes, along with chemical, mineralogical-petrographic analyses, micropaleontological investigations, c...
Article
Full-text available
The sex profile estimation of pre-historic communities is often complicated by the commingled and scattered nature of skeletal assemblages. Demographic profiles are usually lacking and provide very truncated representations of these populations but proteomic analysis of sex-specific amelogenin peptides in tooth enamel brings new promise to these st...
Article
Full-text available
The Iron Age is characterized by an extended interweaving of movements by Celts in Europe. Several waves of Celts from Western and Central Europe migrated southeast and west from the core area of the La Téne culture (between Bourgogne and Bohemia). Through the analysis of non-metric dental traits, this work aims to understand the biological relatio...
Article
Full-text available
Since prehistoric times, the island of Sardinia—in the western Mediterranean—has played a leading role in the dynamics of human population and mobility, in the circulation of raw materials and artefacts, idioms and customs, of technologies and ideas that have enriched the biological, linguistic and cultural heritage of local groups. For the Phoenic...
Article
Full-text available
An interlaboratory comparison (ILC) was organised to characterise ⁸⁷ Sr/ ⁸⁶ Sr isotope ratios in geological and industrial reference materials by applying the so‐called conventional method for determining ⁸⁷ Sr/ ⁸⁶ Sr isotope ratios. Four cements (VDZ 100a, VDZ 200a, VDZ 300a, IAG OPC‐1), one limestone (IAG CGL ML‐3) and one slate (IAG OU‐6) refere...
Article
Full-text available
We present chemical and mineralogical data on a megacryst of a unique carbonate-bearing fluorapatite from altered Tertiary volcanics of the Veneto Volcanic Province (VVP) in the western Lessini Mountain range (Veneto, northern Italy). The cm-sized specimen was identified and characterized by scanning electron microscope (SEM), X-ray powder diffract...
Article
The biological life history of infants from archaeological contexts can provide a unique insight into past human populations. Dental mineralized tissues contain a permanent record of their growth that can provide access to the prenatal and early infant life, and mortality, of human skeletons. This study focuses on the histomorphometric analysis of...
Article
Full-text available
The Early Iron Age in Italy (end of the tenth to the eighth century BCE) was characterized by profound changes which influenced the subsequent political and cultural scenario in the peninsula. At the end of this period people from the eastern Mediterranean (e.g. Phoenicians and Greek people) settled along the Italian, Sardinian and Sicilian coasts....
Article
Full-text available
In this study we explore the potential of combining traditional zooarchaeological determination and proteomic identification of morphologically non-diagnostic bone fragments (ZooMS) collected from the Uluzzian levels of three Italian sites: Uluzzo C Rock Shelter, Roccia San Sebastiano cave, and Riparo del Broion. Moreover, we obtained glutamine dea...
Article
Full-text available
Objectives The study of the development of human bipedalism can provide a unique perspective on the evolution of morphology and behavior across species. To generate new knowledge of these mechanisms, we analyze changes in both internal and external morphology of the growing human talus in a sample of modern human juveniles using an innovative appro...
Article
This paper deals with mineralogical-petrographic, microstructural and geochemical analyses for the archaeometric characterization of silicate-bearing granoblastic marbles from the so-called Waldensian Valleys of Piedmont (i.e. Pellice, Germanasca and lower Chisone Valleys, Cottian Alps, Italy). These stones, belonging to the Dora-Maira Massif of th...
Article
Full-text available
Objectives: During the middle-to-upper Paleolithic transition (50,000 and 40,000 years ago), interaction between Neanderthals and Homo sapiens varied across Europe. In southern Italy, the association between Homo sapiens fossils and non-Mousterian material culture, as well as the mode and tempo of Neanderthal demise, are still vividly debated. In...
Article
Full-text available
Quartz luminescence finds applications on many fields, but much work still needs to be done to precisely characterize it. In this work, we made further developments on the study of luminescence of quartz from La Sassa, Tuscany: a sample with unique properties in this regard. Photoluminescence (PL) measurements allowed study of the excitation profil...
Article
Full-text available
Objective The development of bipedalism is a very complex activity that contributes to shaping the anatomy of the foot. The talus, which starts ossifying in utero, may account for the developing stages from the late gestational phase onwards. Here, we explore the early development of the talus in both its internal and external morphology to broaden...
Article
Full-text available
We present the results of a multi-disciplinary investigation on a deciduous human tooth (Pradis 1), recently recovered from the Epigravettian layers of the Grotte di Pradis archaeological site (Northeastern Italian Prealps). Pradis 1 is an exfoliated deciduous molar (Rdm2), lost during life by an 11–12-year-old child. A direct radiocarbon date prov...
Article
The Dolomites (Southern Alps, Italy) is a most significant region to investigate the evolution of shallow-marine ecosystems during the end-Permian mass extinction (EPME). Shallow-marine ecosystems are complex places from an oceanographic viewpoint and combine high biological productivity and ecological diversity. Therefore, establishing the timing...
Article
The Terminal Carbonate Complex (TCC) is an upper Messinian shallow-water succession characterized by abundant oolites deposits and microbial-derived carbonates mainly known from the Western Mediterranean. The importance of the TCC derives from the close relation of its deposition with the Messinian salinity crisis and from the presence of large and...
Article
Full-text available
Bones and teeth are biological archives, but their structure and composition are subjected to alteration overtime due to biological and chemical degradation postmortem, influenced by burial environment and conditions. Nevertheless, organic fraction preservation is mandatory for several archeometric analyses and applications. The mutual protection b...
Article
Fluid sources and migration pathways can dramatically change during the multiphase tectonic evolution of thrust wedges. We present a multidisciplinary study of syntectonic calcite cements in the Lower Cretaceous carbonates of the external Bornes (SE France), which underwent sub-aerial exposure during flexural bulging, layer-parallel shortening, fol...
Article
A new matrix‐matched reference material has been developed – NFHS‐2‐NP (NIOZ Foraminifera House Standard‐2‐Nano‐Pellet) – with element mass fractions, and isotope ratios resembling that of natural foraminiferal calcium carbonate. A 180–355 µm size fraction of planktic foraminifera was milled to nano‐particles and pressed to pellets. We report refer...
Article
Sex estimation of human skeletons may present difficulties, especially in relation to their state of preservation or to weak sexual dimorphism. This leads to reliance on gendered grave goods, giving rise to potential issues related to the social role and condition of the individual and the relationship with the community. We aimed at examining skel...
Article
Full-text available
This study focuses on the analysis of bronze finds and other objects employed in metallurgical activities from the Middle and Recent Bronze Age site of Solarolo-via Ordiere (Ravenna, Italy) investigated between 2006 and 2019. Materials were found both in Middle and Recent Bronze Age layers, as well as from trenches/ survey, and include mostly pins...
Article
Full-text available
The evolution and development of human mortuary behaviors is of enormous cultural significance. Here we report a richly-decorated young infant burial (AVH-1) from Arma Veirana (Liguria, northwestern Italy) that is directly dated to 10,211–9910 cal BP (95.4% probability), placing it within the early Holocene and therefore attributable to the early M...
Article
Full-text available
In this study, twenty five partially vitrified rocks and four samples of vitrified rocks collected on the top hill called Serravuda (Acri, Calabria, Italy) are analyzed. The goal is to shed light on the origin of these enigmatic vitrified materials. The analyzed vitrified rocks are a breccia of cemented rock fragments (gneiss, granitoid, and amphib...
Preprint
We present a novel database of environmental and geological 87Sr/86Sr values (n = 1920) from Italy, using literature data and newly analysed samples, for provenance purposes. We collected both bioavailable and non-bioavailable (i.e. rocks and bulk soils) data to attain a broader view of the Sr isotope variability of the Italian peninsula. These dat...
Article
Full-text available
In this study, we present osteological and strontium isotope data of 29 individuals (26 cremations and 3 inhumations) from Szigetszentmiklós-Ürgehegy, one of the largest Middle Bronze Age cemeteries in Hungary. The site is located in the northern part of the Csepel Island (a few kilometres south of Budapest) and was in use between c. 2150 and 1500...
Article
Full-text available
The Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transition, between 50 000 and 40 000 years ago, is a period of important ecological and cultural changes. In this framework, the Rock Shelter of Uluzzo C (Apulia, southern Italy) represents an important site due to Late Mousterian and Uluzzian evidence preserved in its stratigraphic sequence. Here, we present the r...
Article
Full-text available
We tested two miniaturized extraction chromatography protocols for strontium isolation based on 300 μL (Protocol 1) and 30 μL (Protocol 2) column volumes of Sr‐Spec resin, for the simultaneous determination of 87Sr/86Sr and δ88/86Sr by MC‐ICP‐MS. The accuracy and precision of the Sr isotope ratios have been evaluated by analyzing JCt‐1 and SRM 1640...
Article
Before the end of the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM, ∼16.5 ka ago)1 set in motion major shifts in human culture and population structure,2 a consistent change in lithic technology, material culture, settlement pattern, and adaptive strategies is recorded in Southern Europe at ∼18-17 ka ago. In this time frame, the landscape of Northeastern Italy change...
Article
In the present study, an innovative and highly efficient near-infrared hyperspectral imaging (NIR-HSI) method is proposed to provide spectral maps able to reveal collagen distribution in large-size bones, also offering semi-quantitative estimations. A recently introduced method for the construction of chemical maps, based on Normalized Difference I...
Article
Full-text available
Strontium isotopes in biogenic apatite, especially enamel, are widely employed to determine provenance and track migration in palaeontology and archaeology. Body tissues record the ⁸⁷Sr/⁸⁶Sr of bioavailable Sr of ingested food and water. To identify non-local individuals, knowledge of the ⁸⁷Sr/⁸⁶Sr of a non-migratory population is required. However...
Article
In this work, osteological and paleopathological analyses are combined with liquid-chromatography mass spectrometry to study life and death of 30 non-adult individuals from an Early Medieval Italian funerary context (Valdaro, 7th-8th cent. AD). We estimated individual sex by exploiting sexual differences in enamel-bounded peptides. Enamel proteins...
Article
Full-text available
Hammerstones and anvils are among the oldest tools used by hominins to perform a variety of tasks including knapping activities. The bipolar technique on anvil is well documented in Prehistory since the Lower Palaeolithic and is usually considered to be an expedient technique in comparison to other knapping systems. This technique plays a pivotal r...
Article
Full-text available
A 3800 year-long radiocarbon-dated and highly-resolved palaeoecological record from Lake Fimon (N-Italy) served to investigate the effects of potential teleconnections between North Atlantic and mid-to-low latitudes at the transition from Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 3 to 2. Boreal ecosystems documented in the Fimon record reacted in a sensitive way...
Article
The site of Riparo Broion (Vicenza, northeastern Italy) preserves a stratigraphic sequence documenting the Middle-to-Upper Paleolithic transition, in particular the final Mousterian and the Uluzzian cultures. In 2018, a human tooth was retrieved from a late Mousterian level, representing the first human remain ever found from this rock shelter (Rip...
Article
Full-text available
We report on sporadic fossil vertebrates from Brunei Darussalam (Borneo). Most of these isolated remains are reworked and derive from Penanjong Beach known for former coastal cliffs used to be rich in marine molluscs. Previously, the only vertebrate remains reported were shark teeth. With new material, the fish fauna is now represented by six shark...
Article
Full-text available
Objectives: The analysis of prehistoric human dietary habits is key for understanding the effects of paleoenvironmental changes on the evolution of cultural and social human behaviors. In this study, we compare results from zooarchaeological, stable isotope and dental calculus analyses as well as lower second molar macrowear patterns to gain a bro...
Article
Strontium isotopes and selected trace elements (Rb, Sr, REE, Zr, Hf, Th, and U) were measured on samples of Libyan Desert Glass (LDG) and a series of terrestrial materials (rocks, LDG-bearing soils, eolic sand) collected over a large area of southwestern Egypt to identify the LDG terrestrial parent material and the site where impact melting occurre...
Preprint
Full-text available
The end of the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) in Europe (~16.5 ka ago) set in motion major changes in human culture and population structure. In Southern Europe, Early Epigravettian material culture was replaced by Late Epigravettian art and technology about 18-17 ka ago at the beginning of southern Alpine deglaciation, although available genetic evide...
Article
Differences in REE patterns of calcite from extensional and shear veins of the Sestola Vidiciatico Tectonic Unit in the Northern Apennines suggest variations in fluid source during the seismic cycle in an ancient analogue of a shallow megathrust (Tmax c. 100–150°C). In shear veins, a positive Eu anomaly suggests an exotic fluid source, probably hot...
Article
Full-text available
Truffles are highly valuable ectomycorrhizal fungi that grow naturally in alkaline, calcareous soils. Iron deficiency chlorosis is a common problem in truffle (Tuber spp.) cultivation due to the high quantity of lime added to increase the pH of acidic soils. In this work, the effects of ferric hydroxide nanoparticles embedded in an exopolysaccharid...
Article
The paper reports on the development of an analytical method based on the use of a new miniaturised short-wave infrared (SWIR) spectrometer for the analysis of cultural heritage samples. The spectrometer is a prototype characterised by small dimension (45.0 mm in diameter x 47.5 mm in height x 60 g weight), easily handled and transferable out of re...
Preprint
Roccia San Sebastiano is a tectonic-karstic cave located at the foot of the southern slope of Mt. Massico, in the territory of Mondragone (Caserta) in Campania (southern Italy). Systematic excavation has been carried out since 2001, leading to the partial exploration of an important Pleistocene deposit, extraordinarily rich in lithic and faunal rem...
Article
Roccia San Sebastiano is a tectonic-karstic cave located at the foot of the southern slope of Mt. Massico, in the territory of Mondragone (Caserta) in Campania (southern Italy). Systematic excavation has been carried out since 2001, leading to the partial exploration of an important Pleistocene deposit, extraordinarily rich in lithic and faunal rem...
Article
Full-text available
Strontium isotopes are applied to a wide range of scientific fields and to different types of sample materials, providing valuable information foremost about provenance and age, but also on diagenetic processes and mixing relationships between different Sr reservoirs. The development of in-situ analytical techniques, such as laser ablation ICP-MS,...
Preprint
This paper summarizes the current state of knowledge about the millennial scale climate variability characterizing Marine Isotope Stage 3 (MIS 3) in S-Europe and the Mediterranean area and its effects on terrestrial ecosystems. The sequence of Dansgaard-Oeschger events, as recorded by Greenland ice cores and recognizable in isotope profiles from sp...
Article
Carbonate-bearing wedge peridotites attest the mobilization of carbon (C) by slab fluids/melts circulating in a subduction setting. In general, COH fluids are thought to derive from the dehydration/partial melting of the crustal portions of slabs, especially during the exhumation of crust-mantle mélanges along continental subduction channels. In th...
Article
Full-text available
Personal ornaments are commonly linked to the emergence of symbolic behavior. Although their presence in Africa dates back to the Middle Stone Age, evidence of ornament manufacturing in Eurasia are sporadically observed in Middle Palaeolithic contexts, and until now, large-scale diffusion has been well documented only since the Upper Palaeolithic....
Preprint
The arrival of Modern Humans (MHs) in Europe between 50 ka and 36 ka coincides with significant changes in human behaviour, regarding the production of tools, the exploitation of resources and the systematic use of ornaments and colouring substances. The emergence of the so-called modern behaviours is usually associated with MHs, although in these...
Preprint
Defining the processes involved in the technical/cultural shifts from the Late Middle to the Early Upper Palaeolithic in Europe (~50-39 thousand years BP) is one of the most important tasks facing prehistoric studies. In this debate Italy plays a pivotal role, due to its geographical position between eastern and western Mediterranean Europe as well...
Preprint
Evidence of human activities during the Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transition is well represented from rock_shelters, caves and open_air sites across Italy. Over the past decade, both the revision of taphonomic processes affecting archaeological faunal assemblages and new zooarchaeological studies have allowed archaeologists to better understand...
Article
Defining the processes involved in the technical/cultural shifts from the Late Middle to the Early Upper Palaeolithic in Europe (~50-39 thousand years BP) is one of the most important tasks facing prehistoric studies. Apart from the technological diversity generally recognised as belonging to the latter part of the Middle Palaeolithic, some assembl...
Article
The arrival of Modern Humans (MHs) in Europe between 50 ka and 39 ka coincides with significant changes in human behaviour, notably regarding the production of tools, the exploitation of resources and the systematic use of ornaments and colouring substances. The emergence of the so-called modern behaviour is usually associated with MHs, although cl...
Article
Evidence of human activities during the Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transition is well represented from rock-shelters, caves and open-air sites across Italy. Over the past decade, both the revision of taphonomic processes affecting archaeological faunal assemblages and new zooarchaeological studies have allowed archaeologists to better understand...
Poster
Full-text available
Many primates are capable of facultative upright locomotion for short periods of time, but this differs from the committed terrestrial bipedalism that is a hallmark of our species. For this reason the evolutionary acquisition of bipedal locomotion, and its relationship to our own transition from a crawling infant to striding bipedalism (5-7 years),...
Article
Full-text available
The in situ analysis of Sr isotopes in carbonates by MC‐ICP‐MS is limited by the availability of suitable microanalytical reference materials (RMs), which match the samples of interest. Whereas several well‐characterised carbonate reference materials for Sr mass fractions >1000 µg g‐1 are available, there is a lack of well‐characterised carbonate m...
Article
Full-text available
This paper summarizes the current state of knowledge about the millennial scale climate variability characterizing Marine Isotope Stage 3 (MIS 3) in S-Europe and the Mediterranean area and its effects on terrestrial ecosystems. The sequence of Dansgaard-Oeschger events, as recorded by Greenland ice cores and recognizable in isotope profiles from sp...
Article
Full-text available
Homogeneity, mass fractions of about forty trace elements and Sr isotope composition of Ca carbonate reference materials (RMs) between original and nano‐powdered pellets are compared. Our results using nanosecond and femtosecond LA‐(MC)‐ICP‐MS show that the nano‐pellets of the RMs MACS‐3NP, JCp‐1NP and JCt‐1NP are about a factor of 2–3 more homogen...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
The Apennine Carbonate Platform (ACP) of central and southern Italy witnesses almost continuous shallow-water carbonate sedimentation from the Late Triassic to the Late Cretaceous over very wide areas. Paleogene shallow-water carbonates are comparatively much less widespread and are generally represented by thin and stratigraphically discontinuous...
Article
Full-text available
The in-situ Sr isotope determination of low-Sr bioapatites is challenging and requires monitoring several interferences, among others Ar-CaPO. In particular, the analysis of human bones and teeth has revealed several pitfalls, which affect the ability to obtain accurate results. In this commentary, I review the data from the paper of Meijer et al....

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