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Mashes to Mashes, Crust to Crust. Presenting a novel microstructural marker for malting in the archaeological record

The detection of direct archaeological remains of alcoholic beverages and their production is still a challenge to archaeological science, as most of the markers known up to now are either not durable or diagnostic enough to be used as secure proof. The current study addresses this question by exper...

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Autores principales: Heiss, Andreas G., Azorín, Marian Berihuete, Antolín, Ferran, Kubiak-Martens, Lucy, Marinova, Elena, Arendt, Elke K., Biliaderis, Costas G., Kretschmer, Hermann, Lazaridou, Athina, Stika, Hans-Peter, Zarnkow, Martin, Baba, Masahiro, Bleicher, Niels, Ciałowicz, Krzysztof M., Chłodnicki, Marek, Matuschik, Irenäus, Schlichtherle, Helmut, Valamoti, Soultana Maria
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7205394/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32379784
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0231696
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author Heiss, Andreas G.
Azorín, Marian Berihuete
Antolín, Ferran
Kubiak-Martens, Lucy
Marinova, Elena
Arendt, Elke K.
Biliaderis, Costas G.
Kretschmer, Hermann
Lazaridou, Athina
Stika, Hans-Peter
Zarnkow, Martin
Baba, Masahiro
Bleicher, Niels
Ciałowicz, Krzysztof M.
Chłodnicki, Marek
Matuschik, Irenäus
Schlichtherle, Helmut
Valamoti, Soultana Maria
author_facet Heiss, Andreas G.
Azorín, Marian Berihuete
Antolín, Ferran
Kubiak-Martens, Lucy
Marinova, Elena
Arendt, Elke K.
Biliaderis, Costas G.
Kretschmer, Hermann
Lazaridou, Athina
Stika, Hans-Peter
Zarnkow, Martin
Baba, Masahiro
Bleicher, Niels
Ciałowicz, Krzysztof M.
Chłodnicki, Marek
Matuschik, Irenäus
Schlichtherle, Helmut
Valamoti, Soultana Maria
author_sort Heiss, Andreas G.
collection PubMed
description The detection of direct archaeological remains of alcoholic beverages and their production is still a challenge to archaeological science, as most of the markers known up to now are either not durable or diagnostic enough to be used as secure proof. The current study addresses this question by experimental work reproducing the malting processes and subsequent charring of the resulting products under laboratory conditions in order to simulate their preservation (by charring) in archaeological contexts and to explore the preservation of microstructural alterations of the cereal grains. The experimentally germinated and charred grains showed clearly degraded (thinned) aleurone cell walls. The histological alterations of the cereal grains were observed and quantified using reflected light and scanning electron microscopy and supported using morphometric and statistical analyses. In order to verify the experimental observations of histological alterations, amorphous charred objects (ACO) containing cereal remains originating from five archaeological sites dating to the 4(th) millennium BCE were considered: two sites were archaeologically recognisable brewing installations from Predynastic Egypt, while the three broadly contemporary central European lakeshore settlements lack specific contexts for their cereal-based food remains. The aleurone cell wall thinning known from food technological research and observed in our own experimental material was indeed also recorded in the archaeological finds. The Egyptian materials derive from beer production with certainty, supported by ample contextual and artefactual data. The Neolithic lakeshore settlement finds currently represent the oldest traces of malting in central Europe, while a bowl-shaped bread-like object from Hornstaad–Hörnle possibly even points towards early beer production in central Europe. One major further implication of our study is that the cell wall breakdown in the grain’s aleurone layer can be used as a general marker for malting processes with relevance to a wide range of charred archaeological finds of cereal products.
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spelling pubmed-72053942020-05-12 Mashes to Mashes, Crust to Crust. Presenting a novel microstructural marker for malting in the archaeological record Heiss, Andreas G. Azorín, Marian Berihuete Antolín, Ferran Kubiak-Martens, Lucy Marinova, Elena Arendt, Elke K. Biliaderis, Costas G. Kretschmer, Hermann Lazaridou, Athina Stika, Hans-Peter Zarnkow, Martin Baba, Masahiro Bleicher, Niels Ciałowicz, Krzysztof M. Chłodnicki, Marek Matuschik, Irenäus Schlichtherle, Helmut Valamoti, Soultana Maria PLoS One Research Article The detection of direct archaeological remains of alcoholic beverages and their production is still a challenge to archaeological science, as most of the markers known up to now are either not durable or diagnostic enough to be used as secure proof. The current study addresses this question by experimental work reproducing the malting processes and subsequent charring of the resulting products under laboratory conditions in order to simulate their preservation (by charring) in archaeological contexts and to explore the preservation of microstructural alterations of the cereal grains. The experimentally germinated and charred grains showed clearly degraded (thinned) aleurone cell walls. The histological alterations of the cereal grains were observed and quantified using reflected light and scanning electron microscopy and supported using morphometric and statistical analyses. In order to verify the experimental observations of histological alterations, amorphous charred objects (ACO) containing cereal remains originating from five archaeological sites dating to the 4(th) millennium BCE were considered: two sites were archaeologically recognisable brewing installations from Predynastic Egypt, while the three broadly contemporary central European lakeshore settlements lack specific contexts for their cereal-based food remains. The aleurone cell wall thinning known from food technological research and observed in our own experimental material was indeed also recorded in the archaeological finds. The Egyptian materials derive from beer production with certainty, supported by ample contextual and artefactual data. The Neolithic lakeshore settlement finds currently represent the oldest traces of malting in central Europe, while a bowl-shaped bread-like object from Hornstaad–Hörnle possibly even points towards early beer production in central Europe. One major further implication of our study is that the cell wall breakdown in the grain’s aleurone layer can be used as a general marker for malting processes with relevance to a wide range of charred archaeological finds of cereal products. Public Library of Science 2020-05-07 /pmc/articles/PMC7205394/ /pubmed/32379784 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0231696 Text en © 2020 Heiss et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Heiss, Andreas G.
Azorín, Marian Berihuete
Antolín, Ferran
Kubiak-Martens, Lucy
Marinova, Elena
Arendt, Elke K.
Biliaderis, Costas G.
Kretschmer, Hermann
Lazaridou, Athina
Stika, Hans-Peter
Zarnkow, Martin
Baba, Masahiro
Bleicher, Niels
Ciałowicz, Krzysztof M.
Chłodnicki, Marek
Matuschik, Irenäus
Schlichtherle, Helmut
Valamoti, Soultana Maria
Mashes to Mashes, Crust to Crust. Presenting a novel microstructural marker for malting in the archaeological record
title Mashes to Mashes, Crust to Crust. Presenting a novel microstructural marker for malting in the archaeological record
title_full Mashes to Mashes, Crust to Crust. Presenting a novel microstructural marker for malting in the archaeological record
title_fullStr Mashes to Mashes, Crust to Crust. Presenting a novel microstructural marker for malting in the archaeological record
title_full_unstemmed Mashes to Mashes, Crust to Crust. Presenting a novel microstructural marker for malting in the archaeological record
title_short Mashes to Mashes, Crust to Crust. Presenting a novel microstructural marker for malting in the archaeological record
title_sort mashes to mashes, crust to crust. presenting a novel microstructural marker for malting in the archaeological record
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7205394/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32379784
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0231696
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