Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/106631
Title: Continuous presence of proto-cereals in Anatolia since 2.3 Ma, and their possible co-evolution with large herbivores and hominins
Authors: Andrieu‑Ponel, Valérie
Rochette, Pierre
Demory, François
Alçiçek, Hülya
Boulbes, Nicolas
Bourlès, Didier
Helvacı, Cahit
Lebatard, Anne‑Elisabeth
Mayda, Serdar
Michaud, Henri
Moigne, Anne‑Marie
Nomade, Sébastien
Perrin, Mireille
Ponel, Philippe
Rambeau, Claire
Vialet, Amélie
Gambin, Belinda
Alçiçek, Mehmet Cihat
Keywords: Grain -- Pollen
Palynology -- Turkey -- Acıgöl, Lake
Pollen, Fossil -- Turkey -- Acıgöl, Lake
Neolithic period -- Middle East
Plants -- History -- Turkey -- Lake Acıgöl region
Evolution (Biology)
Issue Date: 2021
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group
Citation: Andrieu-Ponel, V., Rochette, P., Demory, F., Alçiçek, H., Boulbes, N., Bourlès, D.,...Alçiçek, M. C. (2021). Continuous presence of proto-cereals in Anatolia since 2.3 Ma, and their possible co-evolution with large herbivores and hominins. Scientific Reports, 11(1), 8914.
Abstract: Cereals are a central resource for the human diet and are traditionally assumed to have evolved from wild grasses at the onset of the Neolithic under the pressure of agriculture. Here we demonstrate that cereals may have a significantly longer and more diverse lineage, based on the study of a 0–2.3 Ma, 601 m long sedimentary core from Lake Acıgöl (South-West Anatolia). Pollen characteristic of cereals is abundant throughout the sedimentary sequence. The presence of large lakes within this arid bioclimatic zone led to the concentration of large herbivore herds, as indicated by the continuous occurrence of coprophilous fungi spores in the record. Our hypothesis is that the effects of overgrazing on soils and herbaceous stratum, during this long period, led to genetic modifications of the Poaceae taxa and to the appearance of proto-cereals. The simultaneous presence of hominins is attested as early as about 1.4 Ma in the lake vicinity, and 1.8 Ma in Georgia and Levant. These ancient hominins probably benefited from the availability of these proto-cereals, rich in nutrients, as well as various other edible plants, opening the way, in this region of the Middle East, to a process of domestication, which reached its full development during the Neolithic.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/106631
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