“…Methods for defining the expected local 87 Sr/ 86 Sr range have shifted over the last few decades from statistically parsing human skeletal 87 Sr/ 86 Sr around the sample mean (e.g., Wright, 2005;Slovak et al, 2009;Price et al, 2015) to testing archeological and modern fauna with small home ranges (Price et al, 2002(Price et al, , 2007Evans and Tatham, 2004;Hedman et al, 2009Hedman et al, , 2018Knudson and Tung, 2011). More recently, many scholars have argued that the only reliable way to determine the local 87 Sr/ 86 Sr range is by analyzing the bioavailable strontium in local environmental reference or baseline materials like soils, plants, and local fauna, and then aggregating those reference 87 Sr/ 86 Sr to geological units, soil units, or statistical groupings of baseline and/or skeletal materials (Valentine et al, 2008;Evans et al, 2010;Maurer et al, 2012;Knudson et al, 2014;Kootker et al, 2016;Grimstead et al, 2017;Willmes et al, 2018;Barberena et al, 2019;Pacheco-Forés et al, 2020;Snoeck et al, 2020). Unfortunately, because underlying bedrock geology is highly variable even at a short distance, and because rock weathers unevenly throughout catchments, these methods do not enable the sourcing of a sample to any location beyond the immediate vicinity of the sampling location.…”