Archaeobotanical study of Patagonian Holocene coprolites, indicators of diet, cultural practices and space use

The analysis of coprolite inclusions is instrumental in exploring certain features of paleodiets and paleoenvironments, and in determining the time when the sites were occupied by those who deposited the feces. Plant remains found in palaeofeces can be recognized by means of optical microscopes and...

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Publicado: 2016
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Acceso en línea:https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_2352409X_v10_n_p204_MartinezTosto
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_2352409X_v10_n_p204_MartinezTosto
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spelling paper:paper_2352409X_v10_n_p204_MartinezTosto2023-06-08T16:35:43Z Archaeobotanical study of Patagonian Holocene coprolites, indicators of diet, cultural practices and space use Coprolites Hunter - gatherers Microhistological analysis Plant remains The analysis of coprolite inclusions is instrumental in exploring certain features of paleodiets and paleoenvironments, and in determining the time when the sites were occupied by those who deposited the feces. Plant remains found in palaeofeces can be recognized by means of optical microscopes and through microhistological techniques. The aim of this study is to perform a microhistological analysis of plant remains in probable human coprolites from the Cerro Casa de Piedra, Cueva 7 site, province of Santa Cruz, Argentina, with the purpose of identifying the plants included in the diet of the hunter - gatherers who lived in Patagonia during the Pleistocene - Holocene transition and the Holocene, of recognizing some of their cultural practices and of determining the seasonality of the shelters they used. Our microscope study of the samples revealed epidermal fragments of Ephedra sp. stem, leaf and fruit remains of Empetrum rubrum and Gaultheria mucronata, remains of vascular bundles of Azorella monantha leaves and of Armeria maritima epidermis. Only representatives of the Poaceae family were found among the monocots. Our microhistological study of coprolite provided evidence to endorse the consumption of fruits, namely of E. rubrum and G. mucronata. In addition, by determining the time of the year in which the mentioned species bear fruit, we were able to infer that humans used this cave in summer. Likewise, the identification of Ephedra sp., Armeria maritima and Azorella monantha also allowed us to infer that plants of these species were used as medicine and fuel. © 2016 Elsevier Ltd 2016 https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_2352409X_v10_n_p204_MartinezTosto http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_2352409X_v10_n_p204_MartinezTosto
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Coprolites
Hunter - gatherers
Microhistological analysis
Plant remains
spellingShingle Coprolites
Hunter - gatherers
Microhistological analysis
Plant remains
Archaeobotanical study of Patagonian Holocene coprolites, indicators of diet, cultural practices and space use
topic_facet Coprolites
Hunter - gatherers
Microhistological analysis
Plant remains
description The analysis of coprolite inclusions is instrumental in exploring certain features of paleodiets and paleoenvironments, and in determining the time when the sites were occupied by those who deposited the feces. Plant remains found in palaeofeces can be recognized by means of optical microscopes and through microhistological techniques. The aim of this study is to perform a microhistological analysis of plant remains in probable human coprolites from the Cerro Casa de Piedra, Cueva 7 site, province of Santa Cruz, Argentina, with the purpose of identifying the plants included in the diet of the hunter - gatherers who lived in Patagonia during the Pleistocene - Holocene transition and the Holocene, of recognizing some of their cultural practices and of determining the seasonality of the shelters they used. Our microscope study of the samples revealed epidermal fragments of Ephedra sp. stem, leaf and fruit remains of Empetrum rubrum and Gaultheria mucronata, remains of vascular bundles of Azorella monantha leaves and of Armeria maritima epidermis. Only representatives of the Poaceae family were found among the monocots. Our microhistological study of coprolite provided evidence to endorse the consumption of fruits, namely of E. rubrum and G. mucronata. In addition, by determining the time of the year in which the mentioned species bear fruit, we were able to infer that humans used this cave in summer. Likewise, the identification of Ephedra sp., Armeria maritima and Azorella monantha also allowed us to infer that plants of these species were used as medicine and fuel. © 2016 Elsevier Ltd
title Archaeobotanical study of Patagonian Holocene coprolites, indicators of diet, cultural practices and space use
title_short Archaeobotanical study of Patagonian Holocene coprolites, indicators of diet, cultural practices and space use
title_full Archaeobotanical study of Patagonian Holocene coprolites, indicators of diet, cultural practices and space use
title_fullStr Archaeobotanical study of Patagonian Holocene coprolites, indicators of diet, cultural practices and space use
title_full_unstemmed Archaeobotanical study of Patagonian Holocene coprolites, indicators of diet, cultural practices and space use
title_sort archaeobotanical study of patagonian holocene coprolites, indicators of diet, cultural practices and space use
publishDate 2016
url https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_2352409X_v10_n_p204_MartinezTosto
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_2352409X_v10_n_p204_MartinezTosto
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