Exaggerated expectations in ancient starch research and the need for new taphonomic and authenticity criteria

Ancient starch research illuminates aspects of human ecology and economic botany that drove human evolution and cultural complexity over time, with a special emphasis on past technology, diet, health, and adaptation to changing environments and socio-economic systems. However, lapses in prevailing s...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mercader, Julio, Akeju, Tolutope, Brown, Melisa, Bundala, Mariam, Collins, Matthew J., Copeland, Les, Crowther, Alison, Dunfield, Peter, Henry, Amanda, Inwood, Jamie, Itambu, Makarius, Kim, Joong-Jae, Larter, Steve, Longo, Laura, Oldenburg, Thomas, Patalano, Robert, Sammynaiken, Ramaswami, Soto, María, Tyler, Robert, Xhauflair, Hermine
Other Authors: Al, Tom A.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/90080
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/49425
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-90080
record_format dspace
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-900802020-02-26T14:40:56Z Exaggerated expectations in ancient starch research and the need for new taphonomic and authenticity criteria Mercader, Julio Akeju, Tolutope Brown, Melisa Bundala, Mariam Collins, Matthew J. Copeland, Les Crowther, Alison Dunfield, Peter Henry, Amanda Inwood, Jamie Itambu, Makarius Kim, Joong-Jae Larter, Steve Longo, Laura Oldenburg, Thomas Patalano, Robert Sammynaiken, Ramaswami Soto, María Tyler, Robert Xhauflair, Hermine Al, Tom A. School of Art, Design and Media Visual arts and music::Art history Ancient Starch Biomolecular Archaeology Ancient starch research illuminates aspects of human ecology and economic botany that drove human evolution and cultural complexity over time, with a special emphasis on past technology, diet, health, and adaptation to changing environments and socio-economic systems. However, lapses in prevailing starch research demonstrate the exaggerated expectations for the field that have been generated over the last few decades. This includes an absence of explanation for the millennial-scale survivability of a biochemically degradable polymer, and difficulties in establishing authenticity and taxonomic identification. This paper outlines new taphonomic and authenticity criteria to guide future work toward designing research programs that fully exploit the potential of ancient starch while considering growing demands from readers, editors, and reviewers that look for objective compositional identification of putatively ancient starch granules. Published version 2019-07-18T04:35:41Z 2019-12-06T17:40:14Z 2019-07-18T04:35:41Z 2019-12-06T17:40:14Z 2018 Journal Article Mercader, J., Akeju, T., Brown, M., Bundala, M., Collins, M. J., Copeland, L., . . . & Xhauflair, H. (2018). Exaggerated expectations in ancient starch research and the need for new taphonomic and authenticity criteria. FACETS, 3(1), 777-798. doi:10.1139/facets-2017-0126 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/90080 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/49425 10.1139/facets-2017-0126 en FACETS © 2018 Mercader et al. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and source are credited. 22 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Visual arts and music::Art history
Ancient Starch
Biomolecular Archaeology
spellingShingle Visual arts and music::Art history
Ancient Starch
Biomolecular Archaeology
Mercader, Julio
Akeju, Tolutope
Brown, Melisa
Bundala, Mariam
Collins, Matthew J.
Copeland, Les
Crowther, Alison
Dunfield, Peter
Henry, Amanda
Inwood, Jamie
Itambu, Makarius
Kim, Joong-Jae
Larter, Steve
Longo, Laura
Oldenburg, Thomas
Patalano, Robert
Sammynaiken, Ramaswami
Soto, María
Tyler, Robert
Xhauflair, Hermine
Exaggerated expectations in ancient starch research and the need for new taphonomic and authenticity criteria
description Ancient starch research illuminates aspects of human ecology and economic botany that drove human evolution and cultural complexity over time, with a special emphasis on past technology, diet, health, and adaptation to changing environments and socio-economic systems. However, lapses in prevailing starch research demonstrate the exaggerated expectations for the field that have been generated over the last few decades. This includes an absence of explanation for the millennial-scale survivability of a biochemically degradable polymer, and difficulties in establishing authenticity and taxonomic identification. This paper outlines new taphonomic and authenticity criteria to guide future work toward designing research programs that fully exploit the potential of ancient starch while considering growing demands from readers, editors, and reviewers that look for objective compositional identification of putatively ancient starch granules.
author2 Al, Tom A.
author_facet Al, Tom A.
Mercader, Julio
Akeju, Tolutope
Brown, Melisa
Bundala, Mariam
Collins, Matthew J.
Copeland, Les
Crowther, Alison
Dunfield, Peter
Henry, Amanda
Inwood, Jamie
Itambu, Makarius
Kim, Joong-Jae
Larter, Steve
Longo, Laura
Oldenburg, Thomas
Patalano, Robert
Sammynaiken, Ramaswami
Soto, María
Tyler, Robert
Xhauflair, Hermine
format Article
author Mercader, Julio
Akeju, Tolutope
Brown, Melisa
Bundala, Mariam
Collins, Matthew J.
Copeland, Les
Crowther, Alison
Dunfield, Peter
Henry, Amanda
Inwood, Jamie
Itambu, Makarius
Kim, Joong-Jae
Larter, Steve
Longo, Laura
Oldenburg, Thomas
Patalano, Robert
Sammynaiken, Ramaswami
Soto, María
Tyler, Robert
Xhauflair, Hermine
author_sort Mercader, Julio
title Exaggerated expectations in ancient starch research and the need for new taphonomic and authenticity criteria
title_short Exaggerated expectations in ancient starch research and the need for new taphonomic and authenticity criteria
title_full Exaggerated expectations in ancient starch research and the need for new taphonomic and authenticity criteria
title_fullStr Exaggerated expectations in ancient starch research and the need for new taphonomic and authenticity criteria
title_full_unstemmed Exaggerated expectations in ancient starch research and the need for new taphonomic and authenticity criteria
title_sort exaggerated expectations in ancient starch research and the need for new taphonomic and authenticity criteria
publishDate 2019
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/90080
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/49425
_version_ 1681048492098715648