- cross-posted to:
- interestingshare@lemmy.zip
- cross-posted to:
- interestingshare@lemmy.zip
Neanderthals’ cultural practices, similar to those of Indigenous peoples, might be the answer to the mystery of their high δ¹⁵N values. Ancient hominins were butchering, storing, preserving, cooking, and cultivating a variety of items. All these practices enriched their paleo menu with foods in forms that nonhominin carnivores do not consume. Research shows that δ¹⁵N values are higher for cooked foods, putrid muscle tissue from terrestrial and aquatic species, and, with our study, for fly larvae feeding on decaying tissue.
I mean, this makes sense. Other primates eats grubs. But I would never have come up with this theory without someone else suggesting it first.
Moreover, lactic acid bacteria (LAB), which play a key role in the fermentation process, produce a wide range of enzymes, toxins, and other metabolites that inhibit invasion by unwanted pathogens such as Clostridium botulinum, the agent that causes botulism, and many others (Alakomi et al. 2000; Axelsson 2004; Caplice and Fitzgerald 1999; de Moreno de LeBlanc et al. 2015; Fadda et al. 2002; Farouk et al. 2014; Holzapfel and Wood 2014; Liu et al. 2014; Ray and Joshi 2015; Riley and Chavan 2007; Ross et al. 2002; Singh et al. 2012; Stadnik…
From: https://www.paleoanthropology.org/ojs/index.php/paleo/article/view/752
Hmm, very interesting… That explains a lot.