Jelena Jovanović

Jelena Jovanović

Position:Research associate

Academic Rank: ssistant professor in the field of social humanities - archeology

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Dr Jelena Jovanović is a Senior Researcher at the BioSense Institute. She received her BA (2010), MA (2011), and PhD (2017) degrees from the Department of Archaeology, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade, Serbia, in the field of Physical Anthropology. Starting from 2013 she has been working as Teaching Assistant, and from 2018 as Assistant Professor at the Department of Archaeology, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade. She was engaged as a researcher on various national and international projects (such as fp7, bilateral), including H2020 project BIRTH (Births, mothers and babies: prehistoric fertility in the Balkans between 10,000-5000 BC), the first project in Serbia supported by the European Research Council (ERC). Through several internships in LAMPEA laboratory (Aix-Marseille University, France), she was trained in the field of stable isotope analysis, while as a visiting scholar at the Max Planck Institute for evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig (Germany) she gain knowledge in analysis of ancient dental calculus. Jelena’s area of expertise is physical anthropology, with a special emphasis on the reconstruction of diet and health of the Balkans Mesolithic-Neolithic communities. In her research, she is combining macroscopic physical anthropological methods with state-of-the-art methods, such as stable isotopes and chemical analyses of food microparticles entrapped in dental calculus, as a tool for understanding ancient dietary practices and disease. Her research interests also include the role of carbohydrates in the diet of Balkans prehistoric communities and the impact of food on overall wellbeing, health and fertility.

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  1. Jovanović, J., Power, C., de Becdelièvre, C., Goude, G., Stefanović, S. 2021. Microbotanical evidence for the spread of cereal use during the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in the Southeastern Europe (Danube Gorges): Data from dental calculus analysis. Journal of Archaeological Science 125. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jas.2020.105288
  2. Jovanović, J., de Becdelièvre, C., Stefanović, S., Živaljević, I., Dimitrijević, V., Goude, G. 2019. Last hunters-first farmers: new insight into subsistence strategies in the Central Balkans through multi-isotopic analysis. Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences 11(7): 3279‒3298. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12520-018-0744-1
  3. Jovanović, J., Frémondière, P., Stefanović, S. 2019. Reconstruction of Two Mother-Infant Dyads and Obstetrical Consequences of the Mesolithic-Neolithic Transition: A case Study from Lepenski Vir and Vlasac (Serbia). Bulletins et mémoires de la Société d’anthropologie de Paris, Lavoisier, 31, pp. 60 – 68, 0037-8984, DOI 10.3166/bmsap-2018-0042 (4).
  4. de Becdelièvre, C., Jovanović, J., Hofmanova, Z., Goude, G., Stefanović, S. 2020. A direct insight into dietary adaptations and the experience of Neolithization: comparing subsistence (stable isotopes), provenance (Sr radiogenic signal) and ancestry (aDNA) of Early Neolithic humans from the Danube Gorges (6200-5900 BC). in: Farmers at the Frontier. A Pan European Perspective on Neolithisaton. Eds. Gron, J. Kurt, Rowley-Conwy, Peter, Sorensen, Lasse. Oxbow. pp 45-75. ISBN: 9781789251401.
  5. Stojanovski, D., Živaljević, I., Dimitrijević, V., Dunne, J., Evershed, R. P., Balasse, M., Dowle, A., Hendy, J., McGrath, K., Fischer, R., Speller, C., Jovanović, J., Casanova, E., Knowles, T., Balj, L., Naumov, G., Putica, A., Starović, A. & Stefanović, S. 2020. Living off the land: Terrestrial-based diet and dairying in the Neolithic Balkans. PLOS ONE 15(8): e0237608. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0237608