Strontium-calcium ratios in fossil bone have been used to reconstruct paleodietary adaptations, and to test the hypothesis that early members of our genus had different diets than other early hominids. The results of an earlier study (Sillen et al., Journal of Human Evolution 28, 1995) suggested that contemporaneous hominids may have had different dietary adaptations, but was not consistent with the prevailing hypothesis of scavenging and/or hunting by early Homo.
Previous studies have employed a solubility profiling technique to account
for diagenesis. However, a number of additional factors may alter the interpretation
of Sr/Ca ratios. The currently available data suggest differences between
A. robustus and Homo, but the small number of samples tested makes interpretation
based on dietary variation problematic. A number of natural factors resulting
in altered Sr/Ca ratios have been discussed recently (Burton et al., Journal
of Archaeological Science 26, 1999), and the natural variability in
these ratios is considered in great detail in this study that expands the
sample size through the analysis of additional Australopithecus and Homo
fossils from Swartkrans and Sterkfontein. Specifically, the correlation
between hominid mobility and geological substrates, water pH level, plant
species, plant part, and sex of the individual are all considered when
possible. Our results are evaluated for potential differences in dietary
adaptations of these hominid species, and their dietary adaptations relative
to other mammals. The implications of this study on the problems and prospects
of Sr/Ca ratio analysis are also discussed.