Fig. 4.
LDS for mature goose bones: modern species (cross symbols) and archaeological bones from Tianluoshan (squares). Red (closed) and open diamonds indicate the samples assigned to local and migrant individuals, respectively (based on the stable isotope composition of oxygen). Some goose bones are stored at the Bavarian State Collection for Anthropology and Paleoanatomy, Munich (Germany), Historic England (United Kingdom) Hokkaido University Museum (Japan), Nara National Research Institute for Cultural Properties (Japan), the National Science Museum, Tokyo (Japan), the Natural History Museum at Tring (United Kingdom), the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History (United States), Southampton University (United Kingdom), the University of Copenhagen Zoological Museum (Denmark), Yamashina Institute for Ornithology (Japan), and few are the personal collections of Kazuto Kawakami (Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute, Tsukuba, Japan) and Toyohiro Nishimoto (National Museum of Japanese History, Sakura, Japan).