12 results on '"Boaretto, E"'
Search Results
2. A label-free quantification method for assessing sex from modern and ancient bovine tooth enamel.
- Author
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Kotli P, Morgenstern D, Bocquentin F, Khalaily H, Horwitz LK, and Boaretto E
- Subjects
- Cattle, Animals, Male, Female, Fossils, Tooth anatomy & histology, Tooth chemistry, Israel, Dental Enamel chemistry, Sex Determination Analysis methods, Archaeology methods
- Abstract
Identification of the sex of modern, fossil and archaeological animal remains offers many insights into their demography, mortality profiles and domestication pathways. However, due to many-factors, sex determination of osteological remains is often problematic. To overcome this, we have developed an innovative protocol to determine an animal's sex from tooth enamel, by applying label-free quantification (LFQ) of two unique AmelY peptides 'LRYPYP' (AmelY;[M+2] 2 + 404.7212 m/z) and 'LRYPYPSY' (AmelY;[M+2] 2 + 529.7689 m/z) that are only present in the enamel of males. We applied this method to eight modern cattle (Bos taurus) of known sex, and correctly assigned them to sex. We then applied the same protocol to twelve archaeological Bos teeth from the Neolithic site of Beisamoun, Israel (8-th-7-th millennium BC) and determined the sex of the archaeological samples. Since teeth are usually better preserved than bones, this innovative protocol has potential to facilitate sex determination in ancient and modern bovine remains that currently cannot be sexed., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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3. Sub-annual bomb radiocarbon records from trees in northern Israel.
- Author
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Raj H, Ehrlich Y, Regev L, Mintz E, and Boaretto E
- Abstract
Spatial and temporal variations in the atmospheric bomb radiocarbon make it a very useful tracer and a dating tool. With the introduction of more atmospheric bomb radiocarbon records, the spatial and temporal changes in bomb radiocarbon are becoming clearer. Bomb radiocarbon record from a pine tree in the northern Israel region shows that the Δ
14 C level in the region is closer to the northern hemisphere zone (NH) 1 as compared to the northern hemisphere zone (NH) 2. A comparison of this pine's Δ14 C record with a nearby olive tree's Δ14 C values also highlights changes in the growing season of the olive wood from one year to the other. The observation suggests that olive wood14 C ages can show offset compared to the IntCal curve, and thus they should be interpreted cautiously., (© 2023. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Crystallinity assessment of anthropogenic calcites using Raman micro-spectroscopy.
- Author
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Toffolo MB, Pinkas I, Gallo AÁ, and Boaretto E
- Abstract
Anthropogenic calcite is a form of calcium carbonate produced through pyrotechnological activities, and it is the main component of materials such as lime binders and wood ash. This type of calcite is characterized by a significantly lower degree of crystallinity compared with its geogenic counterparts, as a result of different formation processes. The crystallinity of calcite can be determined using infrared spectroscopy in transmission mode, which allows decoupling particle size effect from atomic order and thus effectively distinguish anthropogenic and geogenic calcites. On the contrary, Raman micro-spectroscopy is still in the process of developing a reference framework for the assessment of crystallinity in calcite. Band broadening has been identified as one of the proxies for crystallinity in the Raman spectra of geogenic and anthropogenic calcites. Here we analyze the full width at half maximum of calcite bands in various geogenic and anthropogenic materials, backed against an independent crystallinity reference based on infrared spectroscopy. Results are then used to assess the crystallinity of anthropogenic calcite in archaeological lime binders characterized by different states of preservation, including samples affected by the formation of secondary calcite, and tested on micromorphology thin sections in which lime binders are embedded in sediments., (© 2023. Springer Nature Limited.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Expansion of eastern Mediterranean Middle Paleolithic into the desert region in early marine isotopic stage 5.
- Author
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Barzilai O, Oron M, Porat N, White D, Timms R, Blockley S, Zular A, Avni Y, Faershtein G, Weiner S, and Boaretto E
- Subjects
- Animals, Arabia, Geography, Middle East, Archaeology methods, Hominidae
- Abstract
Marine Isotopic Stage 5 is associated with wetter climatic conditions in the Saharo-Arabian deserts. This stage also corresponds to the establishment of Middle Paleolithic hominins and their associated material culture in two geographical provinces in southwest Asia-the Eastern Mediterranean woodland and the Arabian Peninsula desert. The lithic industry of the Eastern Mediterranean is characterized by the centripetal Levallois method, whereas the Nubian Levallois method characterizes the populations of the Arabian desert. The Negev Desert, situated between these regions is a key area to comprehend population movement in correlation to climatic zones. This investigation addresses the nature of the Middle Paleolithic settlement in the Negev Desert during MIS 5 by studying the site of Nahal Aqev. High resolution chronological results based on luminescence dating and cryptotephra show the site was occupied from MIS 5e to MIS 5d. The lithic industries at Nahal Aqev are dominated by centripetal Levallois core method. These data demonstrate that Nahal Aqev is much closer in its cultural attributes to the Eastern Mediterranean Middle Paleolithic than to the Arabian Desert entity. We conclude that Nahal Aqev represents an expansion of Middle Paleolithic groups from the Mediterranean woodland into the desert, triggered by better climatic conditions. These groups possibly interacted with hominin groups bearing the Nubian core tradition from the vast region of Arabia., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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6. Discovery of annual growth in a modern olive branch based on carbon isotopes and implications for the Bronze Age volcanic eruption of Santorini.
- Author
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Ehrlich Y, Regev L, and Boaretto E
- Abstract
The volcanic eruption of Santorini in the Bronze Age left detectable debris across the Mediterranean, serving as an anchor in time for the region, synchronizing chronologies of different sites. However, dating the eruption has been elusive for decades, as radiocarbon indicates a date about a century earlier than archaeological chronologies. The identification of annual rings by CT in a charred olive branch, buried alive beneath the tephra on Santorini, was key in radiocarbon dating the eruption. Here, we detect a verified annual growth in a modern olive branch for the first time, using stable isotope analysis and high-resolution radiocarbon dating, identifying down to the growing season in some years. The verified growth is largely visible by CT, both in the branch's fresh and charred forms. Although these results support the validity of the Santorini branch date, we observed some chronological anomalies in modern olive and simulated possible date range scenarios of the volcanic eruption of Santorini, given these observed phenomena. The results offer a way to reconcile this long-standing debate towards a mid-sixteenth century BCE date.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Radiocarbon analysis of modern olive wood raises doubts concerning a crucial piece of evidence in dating the Santorini eruption.
- Author
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Ehrlich Y, Regev L, and Boaretto E
- Subjects
- History, Ancient, Humans, Israel, Mediterranean Region, Radiometric Dating history, Archaeology, Carbon Radioisotopes analysis, Olea physiology, Radiometric Dating methods, Volcanic Eruptions history, Wood chemistry
- Abstract
Charred olive wood is abundant in the archaeological record, especially around the Mediterranean. As the outermost ring closest to the bark is assumed to represent the latest time that the tree was alive, the radiocarbon date obtained from the outermost rings of an olive branch buried during the Santorini volcanic eruption is regarded as crucial evidence for the date of this cataclysmic event. The date of this eruption has far reaching consequences in the archaeology of the Aegean, Egypt and the Levant, and the understanding of their interconnections. We analyzed the radiocarbon concentrations in cross-sections from a modern olive tree trunk as well as from a living branch, and obtained near-annual resolution dates using the radiocarbon "bomb peak". In both cases we show that radiocarbon dates of the last formed wood along the circumference are not chronologically homogenous, and can differ by up to a few decades. Thus the outermost wood layer does not necessarily represent the date of the last year of growth. These findings challenge the interpretation of the results obtained from dating the olive branch from the Santorini volcanic eruption, as it could predate the eruption by a few decades. In addition, our results are also significant for any future studies based on archaeologically preserved olive wood.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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8. High Resolution AMS Dates from Shubayqa 1, northeast Jordan Reveal Complex Origins of Late Epipalaeolithic Natufian in the Levant.
- Author
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Richter T, Arranz-Otaegui A, Yeomans L, and Boaretto E
- Subjects
- Animals, Animals, Domestic, History, Ancient, Humans, Jordan, Domestication, Lunate Bone growth & development, Plant Development
- Abstract
The Late Epipalaeolithic Natufian (~14,600 - 11,500 cal BP) is a key period in the prehistory of southwest Asia. Often described as a complex hunting and gathering society with increased sedentism, intensive plant exploitation and associated with an increase in artistic and symbolic material culture, it is positioned between the earlier Upper- and Epi-Palaeolithic and the early Neolithic, when plant cultivation and subsequently animal domestication began. The Natufian has thus often been seen as a necessary pre-adaptation for the emergence of Neolithic economies in southwest Asia. Previous work has pointed to the Mediterranean woodland zone of the southern Levant as the 'core zone' of the Early Natufian. Here we present a new sequence of 27 AMS radiocarbon dates from the Natufian site Shubayqa 1 in northeast Jordan. The results suggest that the site was occupied intermittently between ~14,600 - 12,000 cal BP. The dates indicate the Natufian emerged just as early in eastern Jordan as it did in the Mediterranean woodland zone. This suggests that the origins and development of the Natufian were not tied to the ecological conditions of the Mediterranean woodlands, and that the evolution of this hunting and gathering society was more complex and heterogeneous than previously thought.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. DNA analysis of a 30,000-year-old Urocitellus glacialis from northeastern Siberia reveals phylogenetic relationships between ancient and present-day arctic ground squirrels.
- Author
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Faerman M, Bar-Gal GK, Boaretto E, Boeskorov GG, Dokuchaev NE, Ermakov OA, Golenishchev FN, Gubin SV, Mintz E, Simonov E, Surin VL, Titov SV, Zanina OG, and Formozov NA
- Subjects
- Animals, Arctic Regions, Cytochromes b genetics, DNA, Mitochondrial, Evolution, Molecular, Geography, Phylogeography, Siberia, DNA, Ancient, Fossils, Phylogeny, Sciuridae classification, Sciuridae genetics
- Abstract
In contrast to the abundant fossil record of arctic ground squirrels, Urocitellus parryii, from eastern Beringia, only a limited number of fossils is known from its western part. In 1946, unnamed GULAG prisoners discovered a nest with three mummified carcasses of arctic ground squirrels in the permafrost sediments of the El'ga river, Yakutia, Russia, that were later attributed to a new species, Citellus (Urocitellus) glacialis Vinogr. To verify this assignment and to explore phylogenetic relationships between ancient and present-day arctic ground squirrels, we performed
14 C dating and ancient DNA analyses of one of the El'ga mummies and four contemporaneous fossils from Duvanny Yar, northeastern Yakutia. Phylogenetic reconstructions, based on complete cytochrome b gene sequences of five Late Pleistocene arctic ground squirrels and those of modern U. parryii from 21 locations across western Beringia, provided no support for earlier proposals that ancient arctic ground squirrels from Siberia constitute a distinct species. In fact, we observed genetic continuity of the glacialis mitochondrial DNA lineage in modern U. parryii of the Kamchatka peninsula. When viewed in a broader geographic perspective, our findings provide new insights into the genetic history of U. parryii in Late Pleistocene Beringia.- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. 14,000-year-old seeds indicate the Levantine origin of the lost progenitor of faba bean.
- Author
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Caracuta V, Weinstein-Evron M, Kaufman D, Yeshurun R, Silvent J, and Boaretto E
- Subjects
- Crops, Agricultural history, History, Ancient, Humans, Israel, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Crops, Agricultural genetics, Domestication, Seeds genetics, Vicia faba genetics
- Abstract
The understanding of crop domestication is dependent on tracking the original geographical distribution of wild relatives. The faba bean (Vicia faba L.) is economically important in many countries around the world; nevertheless, its origin has been debated because its ancestor could not be securely identified. Recent investigations in the site of el-Wad (Mount Carmel, Israel), provide the first and, so far, only remains of the lost ancestor of faba bean. X-ray CT scan analysis of the faba beans provides the first set of measurements of the biometry of this species before its domestication. The presence of wild specimens in Mount Carmel, 14,000 years ago, supports that the wild variety grew nearby in the Lower Galilee where the first domestication was documented for Neolithic farmers 10,200 years ago.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. The onset of faba bean farming in the Southern Levant.
- Author
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Caracuta V, Barzilai O, Khalaily H, Milevski I, Paz Y, Vardi J, Regev L, and Boaretto E
- Subjects
- Bayes Theorem, Geography, Humans, Agriculture, Archaeology, Vicia faba
- Abstract
Even though the faba bean (Vicia faba L.) is among the most ubiquitously cultivated crops, very little is known about its origins. Here, we report discoveries of charred faba beans from three adjacent Neolithic sites in the lower Galilee region, in the southern Levant, that offer new insights into the early history of this species. Biometric measurements, radiocarbon dating and stable carbon isotope analyses of the archaeological remains, supported by experiments on modern material, date the earliest farming of this crop to ~10,200 cal BP. The large quantity of faba beans found in these adjacent sites indicates intensive production of faba beans in the region that can only have been achieved by planting non-dormant seeds. Selection of mutant-non-dormant stock suggests that the domestication of the crop occurred as early as the 11(th) millennium cal BP. Plant domestication| Vicia faba L.| Pre-Pottery Neolithic B| radiocarbon dating| Δ(13)C analysis.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Ancient DNA and population turnover in southern levantine pigs--signature of the sea peoples migration?
- Author
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Meiri M, Huchon D, Bar-Oz G, Boaretto E, Horwitz LK, Maeir AM, Sapir-Hen L, Larson G, Weiner S, and Finkelstein I
- Subjects
- Animals, Archaeology, DNA, Mitochondrial genetics, Geography, Haplotypes, Humans, Israel, Phylogeny, DNA, Genetics, Population, Human Migration, Sus scrofa classification, Sus scrofa genetics
- Abstract
Near Eastern wild boars possess a characteristic DNA signature. Unexpectedly, wild boars from Israel have the DNA sequences of European wild boars and domestic pigs. To understand how this anomaly evolved, we sequenced DNA from ancient and modern pigs from Israel. Pigs from Late Bronze Age (until ca. 1150 BCE) in Israel shared haplotypes of modern and ancient Near Eastern pigs. European haplotypes became dominant only during the Iron Age (ca. 900 BCE). This raises the possibility that European pigs were brought to the region by the Sea Peoples who migrated to the Levant at that time. Then, a complete genetic turnover took place, most likely because of repeated admixture between local and introduced European domestic pigs that went feral. Severe population bottlenecks likely accelerated this process. Introductions by humans have strongly affected the phylogeography of wild animals, and interpretations of phylogeography based on modern DNA alone should be taken with caution.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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