ABSTRACT

What role did plant resources have in the evolution of the human species? Why and how have plants been managed and transported to new environments? Where, how, and why were plants domesticated, and why do the patterns vary in different parts of the world? What is the relationship between the intensification of food production and the rise of complex societies? Numerous new studies are using starch granules discovered in archaeological contexts to answer these questions and improve our knowledge of past human behavior and environmental variation. Given the substantial body of successful research, the time has clearly come for a comprehensive description of ancient starch research and its potential for archaeologists. This book fills these roles by describing the fundamental principles underlying starch research, guiding researchers through the methodology, reviewing the results of significant case studies, and pointing the way to future avenues for research. The joint product of over two dozen archaeological scientists, Ancient Starch Research aims to bring the important new field of ancient starch analysis to the attention of a wider range of scholars and to provide them with the information needed to embark on their own research.

chapter 1|17 pages

Starch and Archaeology

chapter 3|6 pages

Microscopy

chapter 4|22 pages

Starch Pathways

chapter 5|20 pages

Taphonomy

chapter 6|19 pages

Reference Collections

chapter 8|32 pages

Starch in Sediments

chapter 9|27 pages

Starch on Artifacts

chapter 10|12 pages

Modified Starch

chapter 11|7 pages

Looking Ahead