2022
DOI: 10.3389/fevo.2022.1032637
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Lipid residues in ancient pastoralist pottery from Kazakhstan reveal regional differences in cooking practices

Abstract: The Bronze Age—Iron Age transition in Central Asia (ca. 800 BCE) was a period of significant cultural change that was heavily influenced by greater population interaction and mobility. Indeed, scholars have increasingly emphasized the role that “food globalization in prehistory” has played in defining this period. In the mountain foothills of Kazakhstan, culinary traditions from across Eurasia were combined through the use of Southwest Asian wheat, barley, and livestock (cattle, sheep, and goats) with East Asi… Show more

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“…However, it is difficult to envision such labor intensive-operations without a human diet aspect. Furthermore, miliacin, a biomarker associated with Panicum miliaceum, was detected in pottery in Eastern Kazakhstan dating to the Early Iron Age [50]. This implies that broomcorn millet was involved in culinary preparation involving boiling during the 1st millennium B.C.…”
Section: The Role Of Millet In the Human Dietmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, it is difficult to envision such labor intensive-operations without a human diet aspect. Furthermore, miliacin, a biomarker associated with Panicum miliaceum, was detected in pottery in Eastern Kazakhstan dating to the Early Iron Age [50]. This implies that broomcorn millet was involved in culinary preparation involving boiling during the 1st millennium B.C.…”
Section: The Role Of Millet In the Human Dietmentioning
confidence: 99%