In prehistoric hunter-gatherer-fisher communities, demographic growth and a more sedentary life-style are usually associated with locally concentrated food resources. Technologies believed to have been employed for preserving excess food resources include, among many others, salting, smoking, and/or sun-drying of fish and meat. However, direct proof of salting is often lacking, as salt is highly soluble. We present here the first robust evidence of the earliest known examples of fish salting from Middle Mesolithic structures at an archaeological site in Central Sudan (7th millennium BC). A multidisciplinary approach was applied, including a contextual geomorphological study (field analysis; micromorphological and scanning electron microscopy), a mineralogical-microstructural analysis of salt crystallization (X-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscopy), and a chemical analysis of salt concentration (ionic chromatography) in the soil in which salted fish bones have been found. The results indicate that salting fish with the aim of preserving it was common at the site of Al Khiday since the Middle Mesolithic and this habit cannot be related to post-depositional precipitation due to aridification of the area. A clear-cut emphasis on fishing characterized the economy of the human population of the time. This foraging system, together with salting and storing fish seems to be closely connected with its nearly sedentary status.

Fish and salt: the successful recipe of White Nile Mesolithic hunter-gatherer-fishers / L. Maritan, P. Iacumin, A. Zerboni, G. Venturelli, G. Dal Sasso, V. Linseele, S. Talamo, S. Salvatori, D. Usai. - In: JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL SCIENCE. - ISSN 1095-9238. - 92(2018 Apr), pp. 48-62. [10.1016/j.jas.2018.02.008]

Fish and salt: the successful recipe of White Nile Mesolithic hunter-gatherer-fishers

A. Zerboni
Funding Acquisition
;
2018

Abstract

In prehistoric hunter-gatherer-fisher communities, demographic growth and a more sedentary life-style are usually associated with locally concentrated food resources. Technologies believed to have been employed for preserving excess food resources include, among many others, salting, smoking, and/or sun-drying of fish and meat. However, direct proof of salting is often lacking, as salt is highly soluble. We present here the first robust evidence of the earliest known examples of fish salting from Middle Mesolithic structures at an archaeological site in Central Sudan (7th millennium BC). A multidisciplinary approach was applied, including a contextual geomorphological study (field analysis; micromorphological and scanning electron microscopy), a mineralogical-microstructural analysis of salt crystallization (X-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscopy), and a chemical analysis of salt concentration (ionic chromatography) in the soil in which salted fish bones have been found. The results indicate that salting fish with the aim of preserving it was common at the site of Al Khiday since the Middle Mesolithic and this habit cannot be related to post-depositional precipitation due to aridification of the area. A clear-cut emphasis on fishing characterized the economy of the human population of the time. This foraging system, together with salting and storing fish seems to be closely connected with its nearly sedentary status.
English
food conservation; fish salting; Halite; Mesolithic; reduced mobility; Sudan
Settore GEO/04 - Geografia Fisica e Geomorfologia
Settore L-ANT/01 - Preistoria e Protostoria
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
   Scavo Archeologico del Sito Paleolitico di Al Jamrab (Wadi Hamra, Sudan)
apr-2018
2018
Academic Press
92
48
62
15
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Fish and salt: the successful recipe of White Nile Mesolithic hunter-gatherer-fishers / L. Maritan, P. Iacumin, A. Zerboni, G. Venturelli, G. Dal Sasso, V. Linseele, S. Talamo, S. Salvatori, D. Usai. - In: JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL SCIENCE. - ISSN 1095-9238. - 92(2018 Apr), pp. 48-62. [10.1016/j.jas.2018.02.008]
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Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
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262
Article (author)
no
L. Maritan, P. Iacumin, A. Zerboni, G. Venturelli, G. Dal Sasso, V. Linseele, S. Talamo, S. Salvatori, D. Usai
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/551250
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