Sorting the butchered from the boiled |
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Authors: | H.E.C. Koon T.P. O'Connor M.J. Collins |
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Affiliation: | 1. BioArCh, Departments of Archaeology and Biology, University of York, York, Yorkshire YO10 5YW, United Kingdom;2. Department of Archaeology, University of York, York, United Kingdom |
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Abstract: | Is it possible to identify cooked, rather than burnt, bone? Mild heating (≤100 °C,1 h) – typical of cooking – does not lead to detectable changes in any biochemical parameter of bone yet measured. If it is only possible to detect charred bone, how is it possible to detect cooking in the archaeological record? In a previous paper (Koon et al., 2003, J. Arch. Sci.), we used a Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) based approach to investigate changes in the organization of the bone protein, collagen, as it is heated, using bone from heating experiments and short term burials. The work revealed that mineralized collagen, despite requiring aggressive treatment to gelatinise the protein (e.g. 90 °C, 240+ h), readily accumulates minor damage. We believe that the presence of mineral matrix stabilises the collagen enabling the damage to accumulate, but preventing it from causing immediate gelatinisation. Once the mineral is removed, the damage can be observed using appropriate visualization methods. |
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Keywords: | Cooked bone Bone collagen fibrils Butchery TEM Coppergate York |
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