Cooked starchy food in hearths ca. 120 kya and 65 kya (MIS 5e and MIS 4) from Klasies River Cave, South Africa


No Thumbnail Available
Type
Article
Change log
Authors
Mentzer, Susan M 
Ligouis, Bertrand 
Wurz, Sarah 
Jones, Martin K 
Abstract

Plant carbohydrates currently constitute 55-80% of the modern human diet (FAO and WHO, 1997) and some of today’s key global health issues are associated with excessive carbohydrate consumption. However, starch carbohydrate is still a poorly understood element of modern human diet and our past starch diet may provide insights for future research. Despite an archaeological narrative that links our early hominin ancestors to a diet that is rich in roots and tubers, there is little deep time archaeological evidence of human plant starch consumption. Geneticists hypothesise that the duplication of starch digestion genes in early Homo sapiens (~300kya), is an adaptive response to an increased starch diet. Here we offer the earliest evidence of identified fragments of charred starch plant tissue (parenchyma) from cave and rock shelter hearths dated to Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 5e and MIS 4, from the Middle Stone Age (MSA) site of Klasies River main site, South Africa (34.06°S, 24.24°E).

Description
Keywords
Palaeolithic, Starch diet, Tuber-parenchyma, Micro-context, Klasies
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF HUMAN EVOLUTION
Conference Name
Journal ISSN
0047-2484
Volume Title
131
Publisher
Elsevier
Sponsorship
AHRC (1503914)