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The Iceman's Last Meal Consisted of Fat, Wild Meat, and Cereals.


ABSTRACT: 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-year-old 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.

SUBMITTER: Maixner F 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6065529 | biostudies-literature | 2018 Jul

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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The Iceman's Last Meal Consisted of Fat, Wild Meat, and Cereals.

Maixner Frank F   Turaev Dmitrij D   Cazenave-Gassiot Amaury A   Janko Marek M   Krause-Kyora Ben B   Hoopmann Michael R MR   Kusebauch Ulrike U   Sartain Mark M   Guerriero Gea G   O'Sullivan Niall N   Teasdale Matthew M   Cipollini Giovanna G   Paladin Alice A   Mattiangeli Valeria V   Samadelli Marco M   Tecchiati Umberto U   Putzer Andreas A   Palazoglu Mine M   Meissen John J   Lösch Sandra S   Rausch Philipp P   Baines John F JF   Kim Bum Jin BJ   An Hyun-Joo HJ   Gostner Paul P   Egarter-Vigl Eduard E   Malfertheiner Peter P   Keller Andreas A   Stark Robert W RW   Wenk Markus M   Bishop David D   Bradley Daniel G DG   Fiehn Oliver O   Engstrand Lars L   Moritz Robert L RL   Doble Philip P   Franke Andre A   Nebel Almut A   Oeggl Klaus K   Rattei Thomas T   Grimm Rudolf R   Zink Albert A  

Current biology : CB 20180712 14


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  ...[more]

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