Rick Schulting

PROFILE CONTACT INFORMATION

Rick Schulting is a lecturer in Scientific and Prehistoric Archaeology at the University of Oxford. His research interests include the Mesolithic and Neolithic of Western Europe, complex hunter-gatherers, transition to agriculture, mortuary analysis, stable isotope analysis and dietary reconstruction, and skeletal evidence of interpersonal violence. For our research areas in both Baikal and Hokkaido, he will be looking at interpersonal violence. For our research in Hokkaido, he will also focus on individual life histories; carbon, nitrogen and strontium isotopes; diet and subsistence; and mobility and migrations.

Email: rick.schulting@arch.ox.ac.uk

Phone: +44 (0)1865 278309

Fax: +44 (0)1865 278254

Address:
Institute of Archaeology
36 Beaumont St, Oxford OX1 2PG
UNITED KINGDOM

RECENT PUBLICATIONS

Bronk Ramsey C, Schulting RJ, Goriunova OI, Bazaliiskii VI. and Weber AW. 2014. Analyzing radiocarbon reservoir offsets through stable nitrogen isotopes and Bayesian modeling: A case study using paired human and faunal remains from the Cis-Baikal region, Siberia. Radiocarbon 56(2): 789-799.

Lieverse AR, Pratt IV, Schulting RJ, Cooper DML, Bazaliiskii VI, Weber AW. 2014. Point taken: An unusual case of incisor agenesis and mandibular trauma in early Bronze Age Siberia. International Journal of Paleopathology 6:53-59.

Schulting, R.J. 2011. Mesolithic-Neolithic transitions: an isotopic tour through Europe. In: R. Pinhasi and J. Stock (eds.), The Bioarchaeology of the Transition to Agriculture: pp. 17-41. New York: Wiley-Liss.

Schulting, R.J. 2010. Holocene environmental change and the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in northwest Europe: revisiting two models. Environmental Archaeology 15: 160-172.

Schulting, R.J. 2010. Staying home for dinner: an isotopic approach to regionality in Mesolithic Atlantic Europe. In Randi Barndon, Asbjørn Engevik and Ingvild Øye (eds), The Archaeology of Regional Technologies: Case Studies from the Palaeolithic to the Age of the Vikings: pp. 69-88. Lewiston: Edwin Mellen Press.

Bakail Hokkaido archaeology project