INIBIOMA   20415
INSTITUTO DE INVESTIGACIONES EN BIODIVERSIDAD Y MEDIOAMBIENTE
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Starch grains description of three taxa with underground organs from Patagonia and ancient use implications through microbotanical studies
Autor/es:
MOLARES, S; LADIO A H; CIAMPAGNA, ML; CAPPARELLI, _AYLEN
Lugar:
Lecce
Reunión:
Congreso; 18 th Conference of the International Workgroup for Palaeoethnobotany; 2019
Institución organizadora:
18 th Conference of the International Workgroup for Palaeoethnobotany
Resumen:
Underground organs were frequently reported by written documentary evidence from XVIth century onwards to have been an important food source for Patagonian original people. They were usually cooked in ceramic bowls. Their archaeobotanical evidence, however, is still limited to a very few macroremains. The objective of this paper is to develop skills for the identification of Patagonian underground organs from archaeological artifacts through microremains analysis, specifically starch grains, and to contribute to the understanding of the history of used of these plants in the region. Starch grains of two tubers (Tropaeolum porifolium, Diposis patagónica) and one rhizome (Alstroemeria sp.) were described along transversal section of each organ following standard methods and international nomenclature. Shape, size and polarization cross were the most diagnostic variables and allowed distinguishing Diposis patagonica?s as the smallest (mostly up to 15 μm in the major diameter) and most shape diverse starch grains. On the other hand, Alstroemeria and Tropaeolum porifolium had larger starch grains (mostly between 15 and 30 μm), predominantly spherical and oblong in both taxa but also triangular in the latter. Results were applied to the residue analyses of a Late Holocene pot sherd from Monte Loaysa (Santa Cruz, Argentina) from which starch grains affine to Tropaeolum were identified. Prehistoric use implications of this genus and underground organs in general are discussed.