Investigation of the ultrastructural characteristics of foxtail and broomcorn millet during carbonization and its application in archaeobotany |
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Authors: | Qing Yang XiaoQiang Li XinYing Zhou KeLiang Zhao Ming Ji Nan Sun |
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Institution: | Key Laboratory of Loess and Quaternary Geology,Institute of Earth Environment,Chinese Academy of Sciences,Xi’an 710075,China;2 The Laboratory of Human Evolution,Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology,Chinese Academy of Sciences,Beijing 100044,China;3 Graduate University of Chinese Academy of Sciences,Beijing 100049,China;4 Nanjing Institute of Geography and Limnology,Chinese Academy of Sciences,Nanjing 210008,China |
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Abstract: | Fossilized caryopses (or grains) of foxtail millet (Setaria italica) and broomcorn millet (Panicum miliaceum) are important archaeobotanical materials for the study of early human agricultural activities. The morphology and ultrastructural
characteristics of carbonized modern millets caryopses treated in a drying oven and burning in a field were investigated at
different temperatures to study how fossilized millets are formed. The caryopses shrank gradually at temperatures below 200°C,
and starch granules in the endosperm retained their crystalline structure. At 250°C the foxtail millet caryopses expanded,
whereas the broomcorn millet caryopses were greatly deformed. At this temperature, the structure of the starch granules of
both millets became amorphous. At 300°C the caryopses partially turned to ash and became porous, and the ultrastructure of
the starch granules was transformed into alveolate cavities. Fossil caryopses from the prehistoric storage cellar at the Beiniu
Site retained their crystalline structure and were formed by the dehydrating effect of carbonization, indicating that water
molecules were not involved in the starch crystallization. The results of a field burning experiment demonstrated that the
ultrastructure of carbonized caryopses placed on the ground under the fire was amorphous. The amorphous ultrastructure of
the carbonized caryopses recovered from the archaeological layers is consistent with the expected structure of caryopses that
have been carbonized at 250°C. Therefore, we suggest that the recovered caryopses were formed at about 250°C by baking rather
than by burning in an open fire. |
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Keywords: | foxtail millet broomcorn millet carbonization process ultrastructural characteristics archaeobotany |
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