Literature DB >> 32284419

Molecular and isotopic evidence for milk, meat, and plants in prehistoric eastern African herder food systems.

Katherine M Grillo1, Julie Dunne2, Fiona Marshall3, Mary E Prendergast4, Emmanuelle Casanova2, Agness O Gidna5, Anneke Janzen6, Jennifer Keute7, Audax Z P Mabulla8, Peter Robertshaw9, Toby Gillard2, Caitlin Walton-Doyle2, Helen L Whelton2, Kathleen Ryan10, Richard P Evershed2.   

Abstract

The development of pastoralism transformed human diets and societies in grasslands worldwide. The long-term success of cattle herding in Africa has been sustained by dynamic food systems, consumption of a broad range of primary and secondary livestock products, and the evolution of lactase persistence (LP), which allows digestion of lactose into adulthood and enables the milk-based, high-protein, low-calorie diets characteristic of contemporary pastoralists. Despite the presence of multiple alleles associated with LP in ancient and present-day eastern African populations, the contexts for selection for LP and the long-term development of pastoralist foodways in this region remain unclear. Pastoral Neolithic (c 5000 to 1200 BP) faunas indicate that herders relied on cattle, sheep, and goats and some hunting, but direct information on milk consumption, plant use, and broader culinary patterns is rare. Combined chemical and isotopic analysis of ceramic sherds (n = 125) from Pastoral Neolithic archaeological contexts in Kenya and Tanzania, using compound-specific δ13C and Δ13C values of the major fatty acids, provides chemical evidence for milk, meat, and plant processing by ancient herding societies in eastern Africa. These data provide the earliest direct evidence for milk product consumption and reveal a history of reliance on animal products and other nutrients, likely extracted through soups or stews, and plant foods. They document a 5,000-y temporal framework for eastern Africa pastoralist cuisines and cultural contexts for selection for alleles distinctive of LP in eastern Africa.

Entities:  

Keywords:  archaeology; ceramics; lactase persistence; lipid residue analysis; pastoralism

Year:  2020        PMID: 32284419     DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1920309117

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


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