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You are here: Home / Library / RBINS Staff Publications / New evidence from a Roman context in Belgium for fish sauce locally produced in northern Gaul

W. Van Neer, W. Wouters, A. Ervynck, and J. Maes (2005)

New evidence from a Roman context in Belgium for fish sauce locally produced in northern Gaul

Archaeofauna, 14:171-182.

Fish remains from a mid-2nd century AD context at Tienen (Belgium) are believed to represent the remains of a fish sauce produced in northern Gaul. The observed species spectrum, the reconstructed sizes of the fish, and modern data on the abundance, geographical distribution and size of fish in the surf zone of the Belgian coast and in the estuary of the Scheldt basin, together indicate that the species present in the sauce were captured in the upper reaches of an estuary. Using similar reference data it was also possible to establish that the fish were caught during spring or early summer. After a discussion of the possible fish catching methods used in estuaries during Roman times, the assemblage from Tienen is compared to other Roman finds of locally produced fish sauce that have been reported thus far from sites in Great Britain and Belgium.
Peer Review, International Redaction Board
Indexed in Arts and Humanities Citation Index (ISI Thomson) - rated 'A' by the European Reference Index for the Humanities (ERIH)
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