IntroductionCharring process affects the preservation potential of seeds, resulting in limited perceptions of crop assemblages recovered from archaeological layers. Therefore, the specifics of the charring process deserve further investigation. Colloquially referred to as the “Five Grains” (五谷), bread wheat (Triticum aestivum), foxtail millet (Setaria italica), broomcorn millet (Panicum miliaceum), rice (Oryza sativa), and soybean (Glycine max) represent a set of four major cultivated cereals and a pulse constituting crucial staple food in Chinese history and the most frequently discovered crops at archaeological sites in ChinaMethodsThis paper aims to understand the changes in size, volume, and weight loss of grains under variable aerobic ...
Increase in grain/seed size recurrently features as a key element in the ‘domestication syndrome’ of...
Increase in grain/seed size recurrently features as a key element in the ‘domestication syndrome’ of...
Increase in grain/seed size recurrently features as a key element in the ‘domestication syndrome’ of...
IntroductionCharring process affects the preservation potential of seeds, resulting in limited perce...
IntroductionCharring process affects the preservation potential of seeds, resulting in limited perce...
Charring is the most ubiquitous form of preservation of plant material on archaeological sites, occu...
The application of morphometric analysis in archaeobotany has the potential to refine quantitatively...
International audienceThe application of morphometric analysis in archaeobotany has the potential to...
Charring is the most ubiquitous form of preservation of plant material on archaeological sites, occu...
Charring is the most ubiquitous form of preservation of plant material on archaeological sites, occu...
International audienceThe application of morphometric analysis in archaeobotany has the potential to...
The application of morphometric analysis in archaeobotany has the potential to refine quantitatively...
Increase in grain/seed size recurrently features as a key element in the 'domestication syndrom...
Increase in grain/seed size recurrently features as a key element in the 'domestication syndrom...
Increase in grain/seed size recurrently features as a key element in the ‘domestication syndrome’ of...
Increase in grain/seed size recurrently features as a key element in the ‘domestication syndrome’ of...
Increase in grain/seed size recurrently features as a key element in the ‘domestication syndrome’ of...
Increase in grain/seed size recurrently features as a key element in the ‘domestication syndrome’ of...
IntroductionCharring process affects the preservation potential of seeds, resulting in limited perce...
IntroductionCharring process affects the preservation potential of seeds, resulting in limited perce...
Charring is the most ubiquitous form of preservation of plant material on archaeological sites, occu...
The application of morphometric analysis in archaeobotany has the potential to refine quantitatively...
International audienceThe application of morphometric analysis in archaeobotany has the potential to...
Charring is the most ubiquitous form of preservation of plant material on archaeological sites, occu...
Charring is the most ubiquitous form of preservation of plant material on archaeological sites, occu...
International audienceThe application of morphometric analysis in archaeobotany has the potential to...
The application of morphometric analysis in archaeobotany has the potential to refine quantitatively...
Increase in grain/seed size recurrently features as a key element in the 'domestication syndrom...
Increase in grain/seed size recurrently features as a key element in the 'domestication syndrom...
Increase in grain/seed size recurrently features as a key element in the ‘domestication syndrome’ of...
Increase in grain/seed size recurrently features as a key element in the ‘domestication syndrome’ of...
Increase in grain/seed size recurrently features as a key element in the ‘domestication syndrome’ of...
Increase in grain/seed size recurrently features as a key element in the ‘domestication syndrome’ of...