103 research outputs found
The Iceman's Last Meal Consisted of Fat, Wild Meat, and Cereals
The history of humankind is marked by the constant
adoption of new dietary habits affecting human
physiology, metabolism, and even the development
of nutrition-related disorders. Despite clear archaeological evidence for the shift from hunter-gatherer
lifestyle to agriculture in Neolithic Europe [1], very little information exists on the daily dietary habits of our
ancestors. By undertaking a complementary -omics
approach combined with microscopy, we analyzed
the stomach content of the Iceman, a 5,300-yearold European glacier mummy [2, 3]. He seems to
have had a remarkably high proportion of fat in his
diet, supplemented with fresh or dried wild meat,
cereals, and traces of toxic bracken. Our multipronged approach provides unprecedented analytical depth, deciphering the nutritional habit, meal
composition, and food-processing methods of this
Copper Age individual
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