Gisela Grupe
Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
127 Papers
1K Citations
Gisela Grupe is an academic researcher from Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Stable isotope ratio. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 124 publications.
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Papers
Kinds of diversity and scales of analysis in the LBK
Daniela Hofmann,R. Alexander Bentley,Penelope Bickle,Amy Bogaard,J. Crowther,Philippa Cullen,Linda Fibigit,Gisela Grupe,Julie Hamilton,Robert E. M. Hedges,Richard I. Macphail,Geoff Nowell,Joachim Pechtl,Melanie Sarque,Alasdair Whittle +14 more
- 01 Jan 2012
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The dead of the Dietersberg Cave, Germany: new insights into burial practices of the Iron Age from 14C-dates and stable isotope (C, N, O, Sr) analyses of human bones and teeth
TL;DR: In this article, the provenance and depositional setting of the human remains in the Dietersberg Cave, located in the Franconian Alb in Southern Germany, are evaluated based on 14C-dates and stable isotope analyses (C, N, O, Sr).
Paleoamerican diet, migration and morphology in Brazil
TL;DR: This study reports on paleodietary singals of a Paleoamerican found in a third Brazilian ecological setting--a riverine shellmound, or sambaqui, located in the Atlantic forest, and shows that he represents a population that was dependent on inland resources as opposed to marine coastal resources.
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•Journal Article
Stable isotope analysis of fossil bone
TL;DR: The potential of isotopic analysis of light elements (C, N, O) for the reconstruction of ecological niches of extinct species and how stable strontium isotope ratios can give clues to residence change, migration events and home range assessment in the past are reviewed.
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Hydroxylysine deficiency, conspicuous skeletal lesions and a strange burial practice in a historical German island population
A. Burkhardt,Gisela Grupe +1 more
TL;DR: Palaeodietary reconstruction by stable isotope analysis resulted in a protein rich diet, confirming fishing as an important part of the subsistence economy and suggesting that the conspicuous pathological lesions could also have been caused by a systemic connective tissue disease.
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