“…Within the context of marine environments, archeologists have used stable carbon isotope analysis to reconstruct the relative contributions of terrestrial versus marine resources to mixed human diets (e.g., Coltrain, 2009;Coltrain et al, 2004;Lovell et al, 1986;McGovern-Wilson and Quinn, 1996 [but see Ambrose et al, 1997]; Parkington, 1988Parkington, , 1991Richards and Hedges, 1999;Sealy, 1986;Sealy and van der Merwe, 1985, 1986, 1988Walker and DeNiro, 1986). This method has also been used to track migration and foraging patterns of several Arctic species including bowhead whale, anadromous fish, migratory waterfowl and pinnipeds (e.g., Bunn et al, 1989;Burton and Koch, 1999;Caraveo-Patiño et al, 2007;Dehn et al, 2007;Hobson, 1987;Hobson and Welch, 1995;Kling et al, 1992;Tamelander et al, 2006;Wada et al, 1991). In the case of human foragers subsisting on marine resources, stable carbon isotope values can also covary with foraging environment.…”