PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Dental plaque reveals key plant in prehistoric Easter Island diet

2014-12-15
(Press-News.org) A University of Otago, New Zealand, PhD student analysing dental calculus (hardened plaque) from ancient teeth is helping resolve the question of what plant foods Easter Islanders relied on before European contact.

Known to its Polynesian inhabitants as Rapa Nui, Easter Island is thought to have been colonized around the 13th Century and is famed for its mysterious large stone statues or moai.

Otago Anatomy PhD student Monica Tromp and Idaho State University's Dr John Dudgeon have just published new research clearing up their previous puzzling finding that suggested palm may have been a staple plant food for Rapa Nui's population over several centuries.

However, no other line of archaeological or ethnohistoric evidence supports palm having a dietary role on Easter Island; in fact evidence points to the palm becoming extinct soon after colonization.

Nevertheless, the researchers had found that the vast majority of phytoliths (plant microfossils) embedded within the calculus were from palm trees.

The teeth were from burials excavated in the early 1980s from multiple coastal archaeological sites around the island.

To clear up the mystery, the pair undertook further analysis, newly published in the Journal of Archaeological Science. This included identifying starch grains in the dental calculus removed from 30 teeth.

After removing and decalcifying the plaque from each tooth, Ms Tromp and Dr Dudgeon identified starch grains that were consistent with modern sweet potato. None of the recovered grains showed any similarities to banana, taro or yam, other starchy plants that are hypothesised to be part of the diet.

The researchers went on to test modern sweet potato skins grown in sediment similar to that of Rapa Nui's and found that as tubers grow, their skins seem to incorporate palm phytoliths from the soil.

"So this actually bolsters the case for sweet potato as a staple and important plant food source for the Islanders from the time the island was first colonised,"Ms Tromp says.

She and Dr Dudgeon are the first biological anthropologists to study dental calculus in the Pacific.

"It is an excellent target for looking at the plant component of ancient diets as microfossils become embedded in dental calculus throughout a person's life. You can get a good idea of some of the plant foods people were eating, which is not an easy task.

This research also shows that the plant foods you find evidence for in dental calculus can come from the environment that foods are grown in and not necessarily from the food itself - this finding has the potential to impact dental calculus studies worldwide. "

Determining plants' role in ancient Oceanic diets is extremely difficult due to the scarcity of plant remains, but this research of microscopic plant remains is providing one more piece of the dietary puzzle.

INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Rekindling marriage after combat deployment

2014-12-15
A new study offers strategies for rekindling marriage after a spouse returns home from combat with post-traumatic stress symptoms present in one or both of the spouses. For participants as individuals, it's important to allow negative emotions, to give each other time and space to do the work of rediscovery and accept a changed reality, and to recognize and address the individual needs of the other. As couples, strategies include going with the flow, opening your heart, becoming best friends, maintaining trust, and communicating effectively. As families, it's helpful ...

Edmontosaurus regalis and the Danek Bonebed featured in special issue of CJES

Edmontosaurus regalis and the Danek Bonebed featured in special issue of CJES
2014-12-15
An exciting new special issue of the Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences shines the spotlight on the Danek Bonebed in Edmonton, Alberta and increases our knowledge of Edmonton's urban dinosaurs, especially the iconic hadrosaurid Edmontosaurus. Well-preserved, articulated dinosaur specimens often receive much attention from scientists and the public, but bonebeds provide a great deal of information that even the most spectacular articulated specimens cannot. Because of the amount of fossil material, the quality of preservation, ease of preparation, and volume of associated ...

Making sense through order

2014-12-15
"Most researchers have treated the order in which the information is shown as a nuisance that can bias the interpretation of data," said Ting Qian, lead author and a former graduate student in brain and cognitive sciences at the University of Rochester. But as Qian's co-author and thesis advisor, Professor Richard Aslin explained, "We see it as a part of the natural statistics of the real world, and therefore a signal--or cue--that can be the basis of rational decisions." In a paper published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Qian and Aslin ...

Cake or carrots? Timing may decide what you'll nosh on

Cake or carrots? Timing may decide what youll nosh on
2014-12-15
VIDEO: Caltech neuroeconomists have found that your ability to exercise self-control when deciding what to eat may depend upon just how quickly your brain factors healthfulness into a decision. Click here for more information. When you open the refrigerator for a late-night snack, are you more likely to grab a slice of chocolate cake or a bag of carrot sticks? Your ability to exercise self-control--i.e., to settle for the carrots--may depend upon just how quickly your brain factors ...

New study reveals Montmorency tart cherry juice accelerated recovery after intense cycling

New study reveals Montmorency tart cherry juice accelerated recovery after intense cycling
2014-12-15
LANSING, Mich. December 15, 2014 - Cyclists who are preparing for race day may have a new sports drink to give them an edge in recovery: tart cherry juice. A new study published in Applied Physiology, Nutrition, and Metabolism found that Montmorency tart cherry juice helped accelerate recovery, maintain muscle function and reduce certain markers of exercise-induced inflammation among a group of cyclists participating in a simulated road race. The research team, led by Glyn Howatson and Phillip G. Bell at Northumbria University in the U.K., conducted this double-blind, ...

NASA's Fermi Mission brings deeper focus to thunderstorm gamma-rays

NASAs Fermi Mission brings deeper focus to thunderstorm gamma-rays
2014-12-15
Each day, thunderstorms around the world produce about a thousand quick bursts of gamma rays, some of the highest-energy light naturally found on Earth. By merging records of events seen by NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope with data from ground-based radar and lightning detectors, scientists have completed the most detailed analysis to date of the types of thunderstorms involved. "Remarkably, we have found that any thunderstorm can produce gamma rays, even those that appear to be so weak a meteorologist wouldn't look twice at them," said Themis Chronis, who led ...

Do carrots actually help you see better? (video)

Do carrots actually help you see better? (video)
2014-12-15
WASHINGTON, Dec. 15, 2014 -- It's something your mother told you time and time again at the dinner table: "Eat your carrots, they'll help you see better!" So was she right? This week, Reactions answers the question with the help of chemist Chad Jones, Ph.D., host of the award-winning Collapsed Wave Function podcast. Check out the video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w3DNScZYvYY. Subscribe to the series at Reactions YouTube, and follow us on Twitter @ACSreactions to be the first to see our latest videos. INFORMATION:The American Chemical Society is a nonprofit ...

Research finds copyright confusion has 'chilling effects' in online creative publishing

2014-12-15
Online content creation has become easier than ever and is quickly reaching parity with content consumption. From writing a blog or social media post to letting an app turn your photos into a video montage, anyone with an Internet connection can publish these creations with the click of a button. But in the age of Web publishing, it has become increasingly confusing for content creators to figure out how to protect their original works or to use other content legally -- such as for remixes or parodies -- on major websites for user-generated content, including YouTube ...

Adolescent childbearing in Iraq rose due to earlier marriages among less-educated women

2014-12-15
New York (15 December 2014)--A study published today is the first detailed assessment of whether the 8-year Iraq War had an effect on childbearing. The study found that before the war, from 1997 to 2003, adolescent fertility in Iraq was stable at just below 70 births per 1,000 girls aged 15-19. However, soon after the beginning of the war, adolescent fertility rose by more than 30 percent, reaching over 95 births per 1,000 girls in 2010. The study is included in the December 2014 issue of Population and Development Review, a peer-reviewed journal published by the Population ...

NASA catches Tropical Cyclone Bakung's remnants

NASA catches Tropical Cyclone Bakungs remnants
2014-12-15
Tropical Cyclone Bakung ran into adverse conditions in the Southern Indian Ocean that weakened it to a remnant low pressure system when NASA's Aqua satellite spotted it on Dec. 15. The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer or MODIS instrument that flies aboard Aqua captured a visible picture of Bakung's elongated remnants on Dec. 5 at 08:05 UTC (3:05 a.m. EST). The storm appeared to be stretched out from west to east in the visible image. The last advisory on the tropical cyclone came on Dec. 13 when the storm was still a tropical storm with maximum sustained ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Africa’s forests have switched from absorbing to emitting carbon, new study finds

Scientists develop plastics that can break down, tackling pollution

What is that dog taking? CBD supplements could make dogs less aggressive over time, study finds

Reducing human effort in rating software

Robots that rethink: A SMU project on self-adaptive embodied AI

Collaborating for improved governance

The 'black box' of nursing talent’s ebb and flow

Leading global tax research from Singapore: The strategic partnership between SMU and the Tax Academy of Singapore

SMU and South Korea to create seminal AI deepfake detection tool

Strengthening international scientific collaboration: Diamond to host SESAME delegation from Jordan

Air pollution may reduce health benefits of exercise

Ancient DNA reveals a North African origin and late dispersal of domestic cats

Inhibiting a master regulator of aging regenerates joint cartilage in mice

Metronome-trained monkeys can tap to the beat of human music

Platform-independent experiment shows tweaking X’s feed can alter political attitudes

Satellite data reveal the seasonal dynamics and vulnerabilities of Earth’s glaciers

Social media research tool can lower political temperature. It could also lead to more user control over algorithms.

Bird flu viruses are resistant to fever, making them a major threat to humans

Study: New protocol for Treg expansion uses targeted immunotherapy to reduce transplant complications

Psychology: Instagram users overestimate social media addiction

Climate change: Major droughts linked to ancient Indus Valley Civilization’s collapse

Hematological and biochemical serum markers in breast cancer: Diagnostic, therapeutic, and prognostic significance

Towards integrated data model for next-generation bridge maintenance

Pusan National University researchers identify potential new second-line option for advanced biliary tract cancer

New study warns of alarming decline in high blood pressure control in England

DNA transcription is a tightly choreographed event. A new study reveals how it is choreographed

Drones: An ally in the sky to help save elephants!

RNA in action: Filming ribozyme self-assembly

Non-invasive technology can shape the brain’s reward-seeking mechanisms

X-ray imaging captures the brain’s intricate connections

[Press-News.org] Dental plaque reveals key plant in prehistoric Easter Island diet