Various biomolecular components preserved in domesticated animal bones recovered from the Nubian site of Qasr Ibrim are used for dietary reconstruction of their foddering and foraging behaviours. Utilising models of the biochemical correlations with the dietary components and their turnover rates, the bulk stable isotope values of bone collagen and apatite combined with compound-specific stable isotope values of the collagenous amino acids (essential and non-essential) provided long-term indicators of the diet of cattle and sheep/goats from the site. Cattle appear to have predominantly consumed C 4 plants, such as sorghum (Sorghum bicolor bicolor Moench.) and millet (Panicum miliaceum L.), during the later periods at the site, suggesting that cattle were subjected to differing feeding strategies over the period of occupation of the site. Furthermore, the δ 1 3 C values of the individual fatty acids (n-hexadecanoic and -octadecanoic acids) preserved in the bones provide short-term indicators of the animals' diet. The application of a new model based on δ 1 3 C values of the bone apatite and fatty acids indicates differences in the long- and short-term diets of sheep/goat, which are less obvious in cattle.