Late ninth millenium B.P. use of Zea mays L. at Cubil?n area, hihgland Ecuador, revealed by ancient starches.

 

Authors
Pag?n Jim?nez, Jaime Rafael
Format
Article
Status
publishedVersion
Description

Today, maize is acknowledged as a plant with a great culinary and industrial versatility. It also has a deep relationship with the native cultures of the Americas and is still a vital food source for hundreds millions of people worldwide. By means of starch grain extraction from ancient lithic artifacts used more than 8000 years ago, here we report what is so far the oldest documented occurrence of maize in highland South America. This study places maize, together with other important economic plants, in the southern Ecuadorian Andes during a period coinciding with the initial stage of maize diversification and long distance expansion after its domestication in southwestern Mexico. These results allow us to unravel an early episode of human innovation previously unknown for South America which is related to the first steps toward the full re-shaping of human subsistence strategies in the continent.
Instituto Nacional De Patrimonio Cultural
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1040618215007971

Publication Year
2015
Language
eng
Topic
MAIZE
DOMESTICATION
DISPERSALS
SOUTH AMERICA
Repository
Repositorio SENESCYT
Get full text
http://repositorio.educacionsuperior.gob.ec/handle/28000/3115
Rights
openAccess
License
restrictedAccess