
doi: 10.1558/ppc.30498
The author looks at the consumption history of 4 fish in Britain from the medieval period using documentary and archaeological data: herring, eel, mackeral, salmon -- all oily fish, so called because they store lipids in their flesh. The results suggest that the high level of consumption of these species in the past may have supplied a sufficient intake of Omega 3 in pre-industrial Britain.
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