Monday, 6 August 2018
New Publication: Determining precolonial botanical foodways: starch recovery and analysis, Long Island, The Bahamas Published on 06 August 2018
Andy J. Ciofalo, William F. Keegan, Michael P. Pateman, Jaime R. Pagán-Jiménez, and Corinne L. Hofman recently published a new article in the Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports entitled "Determining precolonial botanical foodways: starch recovery and analysis, Long Island, The Bahamas. Read the abstract below!
Highlights
Novel evidence of limestone microlith plant processing in the Caribbean.
Tools associated with an earth oven, provided evidence for a previously unreported cooking technique in The Bahamas.
Demonstration of how starch analysis provided information in tropical regions with poor botanical preservation.
Abstract
Descriptions of precolonial foodways in the Caribbean Islands have relied primarily on contact-period European descriptions, which have been used to inform archaeological research. The use of ethnohistoric and indirect archaeological evidence is debated, and competing reconstructions of potential botanical foods and their cooking processes have resulted. To address this issue, starch analysis, which is suitable to provide information on human-plant interactions in tropical regions with poor botanical preservation, was carried out on samples from shell and limestone potential plant-processing tools from the Rolling Heads site, Long Island, The Bahamas. Results of this study revealed that some of these shell and lithic tools were used to process several different starchy food sources: maize (Zea mays L.), manioc (Manihot esculenta Crantz), and coontie (Zamia spp.). The presence of more than one plant species on both the microlith and shell tools, demonstrates their multi-purpose use. These novel data have also generated interpretations of plant processing with limestone grater chips. Overall, our research provides integral data regarding regional-specific processing of manioc, maize, and coontie. This report provides new information regarding human-plant interactions in the Caribbean. Finally, this study provides data on the use of shell tools and lithic graters for processing plants it contributes to ongoing discussions of reconstructing ancient Bahamian and related Caribbean foodways.
Click the link to read the article.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352409X18303158