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@article{2247580, author = {Plomp, Esther and Stantis, Chris and James, Hannah F and Cheung, Christina and Snoeck, Christophe and Kootker, Lisette and Kharobi, Arwa and Borges, Caroline and Reynaga, Diana K Moreiras and Pospieszny, Lukasz and Fulminante, Francesca and Stevens, Rhiannon and Alaica, Aleksa K and Becker, Adrien and Xavier, de Rochefort and Salesse, Kévin Alexis André}, article_location = {Amsterdam}, article_number = {December}, doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dib.2022.108595}, keywords = {data; bioarchaeology; IsoArcH}, language = {eng}, issn = {2352-3409}, journal = {Data in Brief}, title = {The IsoArcH initiative: Working towards an open and collaborative isotope data culture in bioarchaeology}, url = {https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352340922008022}, volume = {45}, year = {2022} }
TY - JOUR ID - 2247580 AU - Plomp, Esther - Stantis, Chris - James, Hannah F - Cheung, Christina - Snoeck, Christophe - Kootker, Lisette - Kharobi, Arwa - Borges, Caroline - Reynaga, Diana K Moreiras - Pospieszny, Lukasz - Fulminante, Francesca - Stevens, Rhiannon - Alaica, Aleksa K - Becker, Adrien - Xavier, de Rochefort - Salesse, Kévin Alexis André PY - 2022 TI - The IsoArcH initiative: Working towards an open and collaborative isotope data culture in bioarchaeology JF - Data in Brief VL - 45 IS - December SP - 1-9 EP - 1-9 PB - Elsevier SN - 23523409 KW - data KW - bioarchaeology KW - IsoArcH UR - https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352340922008022 N2 - From its inception in 2011, the IsoArcH initiative (https://isoarch.eu [1]) has been an altruistic effort to benefit and engage as many people as possible in the field of bioarchaeological science and beyond. The initiative quickly evolved from a small community to a multidimensional one of like-minded individuals promoting, in addition to their common scientific interests, best practices in data accessibility and ethics, collaborative knowledge, open research practices, reproducibility, transparency, scientific innovation, inclusion, and/or public awareness. The cornerstone of the IsoArcH initiative is the IsoArcH database. The IsoArcH database is an isotope bioarchaeology database with samples (human, animal, plant materials) from all archaeological time periods and regions of the world. The isotopic data are complemented by detailed archaeological metadata, whenever available. Because of its collaborative nature and open access model, the IsoArcH database has brought together a variety of stakeholders interested in its services and results. The IsoArcH initiative contribute to a more open and collaborative research culture in isotope bioarchaeology field. In this paper, we present the community structure of the IsoArcH initiative. We also reiterate the CARE (Collective benefit, Authority to control, Responsibility, and Ethics [2,3]) and FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, Reusable [4,5]) principles and explain how they impact the IsoArcH community. Lastly, we argue that an open and collaborative culture within the scope of isotopic data in bioarchaeology is possible and that the IsoArcH initiative can help to move towards a more equitable and resilient isotope research culture in bioarchaeology. ER -
PLOMP, Esther, Chris STANTIS, Hannah F JAMES, Christina CHEUNG, Christophe SNOECK, Lisette KOOTKER, Arwa KHAROBI, Caroline BORGES, Diana K Moreiras REYNAGA, Lukasz POSPIESZNY, Francesca FULMINANTE, Rhiannon STEVENS, Aleksa K ALAICA, Adrien BECKER, de Rochefort XAVIER a Kévin Alexis André SALESSE. The IsoArcH initiative: Working towards an open and collaborative isotope data culture in bioarchaeology. \textit{Data in Brief}. Amsterdam: Elsevier, 2022, roč.~45, December, s.~1-9. ISSN~2352-3409. Dostupné z: https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dib.2022.108595.
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