Published September 8, 2023 | Version v1
Dataset Open

MALDI-TOF MS spectra of archaeological whale bone specimens from Atlantic Europe

  • 1. Norwegian University of Science and Technology
  • 2. National Museum of Antiquities
  • 3. University of York
  • 4. ArScAn Equipe Archéologies Environnementales*
  • 5. University of Rennes 1
  • 6. University of Leon
  • 7. University College London
  • 8. ,
  • 9. Abbey Museum of the Dunes*
  • 10. Coordinadora para o Estudio dos Mamíferos Mariños*
  • 11. University of Greifswald
  • 12. University of Lisbon
  • 13. Spanish National Research Council
  • 14. Catalan Institute of Human Paleoecology and Social Evolution
  • 15. University of Oviedo
  • 16. Gobierno del Principado de Asturias
  • 17. Centre for Baltic and Scandinavian Archaeology*
  • 18. Lower Saxony Institute for Historical Coastal Research
  • 19. University of British Columbia
  • 20. Västergötlands Museum
  • 21. The Arctic University of Norway
  • 22. University of Cambridge

Description

Whale bones are regularly found during archaeological excavations. Identification of these specimens to taxonomic levels is problematic due to their fragmented state. This lack of taxonomic resolution limits understanding of the past spatiotemporal distributions of whale populations and reconstructions of early whaling activities. To overcome this challenge, we performed Zooarchaeology by Mass-Spectrometry on an unprecedented selection of 719 archaeological and palaeontological specimens of probable whale bone from Atlantic European contexts, from the Middle to Late Neolithic (c.3500–2500 BCE) to the eighteenth century CE.

The results show high numbers of Balaenidae (most likely North Atlantic right whale (Eubalaena glacialis)) and grey whale (Eschrichtius robustus) specimens, two species no longer present in the eastern North Atlantic. Many of these specimens derive from contexts associated with the known medieval whaling cultures of the Basques, northern Spaniards, Normans, Flemish, Frisians, Anglo-Saxons, and Scandinavians. This association raises the likelihood that pre-industrial whaling impacted these taxa, contributing to their extinction and extirpation respectively. Much lower numbers of other large whale taxa were identified, suggesting that it was once abundant and accessible whales that suffered the greatest long-term impact. The pattern of natural abundance leading to over-exploitation, well-documented for other taxa, is thus applicable to early whaling.

Notes

MALDI-TOF MS data was analysed using mMass software v5.5.0 (Niedermeyer & Strohalm, 2012); details can be found in the main manuscript.

Funding provided by: Horizon 2020
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100007601
Award Number: 101025598

Files

README.md

Files (7.9 GB)

Name Size Download all
md5:10ee0e8aab8a71913b2531b8ef24927b
2.8 kB Preview Download
md5:428c568eb0bdc3ea6163d88a22f38f2d
7.9 GB Preview Download