
Sarah B. McClure
· ProfessorVerifiedUniversity of California, Santa Barbara · Anthropology
Active 1918–2026
About
Sarah B. McClure is a professor of Anthropology at the University of California, Santa Barbara, where she also serves as the director of the Mediterranean Prehistory and Palaeoecology Laboratory and the Zooarchaeology Laboratory. She is an environmental archaeologist studying human-environmental interactions in the past, with a focus on the environmental and social impacts of the spread of agriculture worldwide, particularly in early farming in the Mediterranean and Europe 8000-5000 years ago. Her research explores the origins and spread of farming during the Holocene, examining how early farming populations affected health, nutrition, disease, and social complexity, and how these impacts have long-term ecological legacies. McClure approaches her research comparatively, focusing on the eastern Adriatic region and impacts of early farming in the western Mediterranean, and has expanded her work to historic contexts in the eastern US and California. She has been involved in excavations and research projects in Croatia, Spain, and other regions, utilizing innovative technologies to define the nature and timing of early farming societies and their environmental effects.
Research topics
- Geography
- Archaeology
- Ecology
- Biology
- Geology
- Forestry
- Oceanography
- Paleontology
- Demography
Selected publications
Journal of Archaeological Science Reports · 2026-03-29
articleOpen accessSenior authorNeolithic cereal cultivation in the Adriatic
Documenta Praehistorica · 2026-04-03
articleOpen accessThe Neolithic in Dalmatia began around 6000 cal BC, marked by the appearance of permanent settlements within the fertile valleys of the region’s karst landscape. Although the archaeobotanical evidence is limited, it indicates the cultivation of a variety of crops, including barley, emmer, einkorn, lentil, and flax, alongside the development of livestock farming, which shifted from a focus on sheep and goat husbandry to cattle farming. This paper presents an analysis of carbon and nitrogen stable isotopes from charred barley and emmer grains excavated from five Neolithic settlements: Pokrovnik, Rašinovac, Danilo-Bitinj, Krivače, and Velištak. The findings suggest that farming in Dalmatia could have involved the cultivation of small, permanent plots subjected to varying degrees of manuring. These results are consistent with broader trends in Neolithic Europe and provide new insights into the regional characteristics of early farming practices in the Adriatic.
Rezultati probnoga arheološkog istraživanja neolitičkog nalazišta Pod Jarugom
Archaeologia Adriatica · 2025-01-23
articleOpen accessProbno arheološko istraživanje neolitičkog nalazišta Pod Jarugom u Podgrađu provedeno je u ožujku 2022. godine. Istraživanje je provedeno s ciljem utvrđivanja stratigrafskih i kulturnih odnosa na nalazištu, kronometrijskog datiranja nalazišta, te utvrđivanja potencijala za buduća sustavna arheološka istraživanja. Istražena je jedna probna sonda površine 3 m2. Nalazište je pripisano srednjem neolitiku, odnosno danilskomu ukrasnom stilu.
Cranial variability in North American domestic and wild canids
Journal of Archaeological Science Reports · 2024-05-17 · 4 citations
articleSenior authorArchaeological and Anthropological Sciences · 2024-07-15 · 3 citations
articleOpen accessSenior authorAbstract Mesolithic groups in Mediterranean Iberia lived during a period of bioclimatic and cultural changes. Thus, their economic behaviour and the availability of plant and animal resources show some interesting variation compared to previous periods that indicate changes in mobility patterns and social connectivity networks. This paper presents information on patterns of animal exploitation of the last hunter-gatherers in this region through zooarchaeological and taphonomic analyses of faunal remains from one of the key sites of the Iberian Peninsular Mesolithic, Cocina cave. This site is located in a mountainous woodland region with a rich Late Mesolithic archaeological record. Results indicate that Iberian ibex, red deer, and rabbits were the most hunted species, but that a diversity of other taxa were also present. The comparison to other Mediterranean sites suggests that Late Mesolithic foragers had common animal exploitation patterns with an increased taxonomic diversification and a clear connection to coastal areas. We suggest these foragers practiced a logistic pattern of food procurement, combining long-term with short-term camps including hunting spots, and in some cases evidence for broad scale social interactions. We hypothesize that Cocina cave may have served as a nexus of social and subsistence activities.
Pastoralism, hunting, and coexistence: Domesticated and wild bovids in Neolithic Sudan
International Journal of Osteoarchaeology · 2023 · 4 citations
Senior authorCorresponding- Geography
- Ecology
- Biology
Abstract The interactions between mobile pastoralists and semi‐sedentary Nilotic foraging groups in the Middle Nile Valley had long‐term implications for the development of social complexity as seen in the ancient African kingdom of Kerma. This study presents the results of the zooarcheological analysis of animal remains from two sites in the 4th cataract of the Nile valley, El Ginefab and Shemkhiya, and compares findings to other published sites in the region during a period of significant climatic change. Results indicate that the communities living at Shemkhiya and El Ginefab differed in terms of their meat preferences and their primary modes of bovid acquisition, and that pastoralist practices changed at El Ginefab through time. Hunting remained an important feature of subsistence practices, and regional comparisons indicate that the acquisition of wild bovids did not disappear with incorporation of domesticated livestock; however, pastoralists limited their hunting practices to smaller wild bovids in contrast to neighboring forager populations. A clear chronological overlap is documented between communities reliant on pastoralism and those reliant on hunting as a subsistence practice for several millennia. This highlights the need to more explicitly characterize and understand the dynamics of coexistence for the spread and establishment of pastoralism regionally, as well as how social ties, subsistence practices, and land use practices overlapped during periods of critical environmental changes and their implications for emerging social complexity.
Quaternary International · 2023-07-11 · 9 citations
articleOpen accessQuaternary International · 2023-06-20 · 3 citations
articleOpen accessSenior authorThis paper constitutes a narrative view of the diachronic research conducted at Cueva de la Cocina (Dos Aguas, València) and its consequences on the Spanish Mesolithic literature from the middle of the 20th century to current times. Since its discover in 1941, the site has become one of the key sites regarding the sequence of the Late Mesolithic in Mediterranean Iberia. The campaigns conducted by L. Pericot (1941-45) provided the first archaeological sequence between the end of the Palaeolithic and the Early Neolithic in the aforementioned area. The review developed by J. Fortea in his fundamental book, focused on the Mediterranean “Epipalaeolithic”, reinforced the initial postulates on the occupations of the last hunter-gatherers and gave place to the current sequence. The goal of this work consists of providing some light in the epistemological trajectory that conforms the Mesolithic's research history. Particularly, we want to highlight the importance to understand pioneering works to open new research questions considering current archaeological challenges and chances.
Interdisciplinary Contributions to Archaeology/Interdisciplinary contributions to archaeology · 2023-01-01 · 1 citations
book-chapter1st authorCorrespondingQuaternary International · 2023-11-27 · 3 citations
articleOpen access
Recent grants
Cultural And Biological Approaches To Domestic Animal Management
NSF · $280k · 2014–2020
Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant: The Emergence of Social Inequality
NSF · $30k · 2015–2018
Frequent coauthors
- 36 shared
Oreto García Puchol
Universitat de València
- 24 shared
Douglas J. Kennett
- 18 shared
Agustín Diez Castillo
- 17 shared
Martin Welker
- 15 shared
Joan Bernabéu Aubán
Universitat de València
- 15 shared
Salvador Pardo-Gordó
Universidad de La Laguna
- 14 shared
Emily Zavodny
University of Central Florida
- 13 shared
Lluís Molina Balaguer
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