Authors
Allan Arndt, Wim Van Neer, Bart Hellemans, Johan Robben, Filip Volckaert, Marc Waelkens
Publication date
2003/9/1
Journal
Journal of Archaeological Science
Volume
30
Issue
9
Pages
1095-1105
Publisher
Academic Press
Description
The excavations of Roman and Early Byzantine contexts at the town of Sagalassos (Turkey) yielded fish remains belonging to species that do not occur near the site. The modern geographical distribution of the identified fish indicates trade with various regions of Anatolia, the Mediterranean coast, Egypt and/or the Levant. Trade with Levant and Egypt is evident throughout the period by the presence of Clarias, a catfish living amongst others in the Nile and Levant. Mitochondrial DNA analysis was successfully carried out on modern populations of this species from Turkey, Syria, Israel and Egypt. Several variable regions were discovered on the mitochondrial control region containing polymorphisms that distinguish the haplotypes. Primer sets were designed to amplify small fragments of ancient DNA containing these informative regions. Ancient fish DNA could be successfully extracted, amplified and sequenced. The …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
A Arndt, W Van Neer, B Hellemans, J Robben… - Journal of Archaeological Science, 2003