HS' OOA boosted by 'Haute Cuisine'

The Old World is a reference to those parts of Earth known to Europeans before the voyages of Christopher Columbus; it includes Europe, Asia and Africa.

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Rokcet Scientist

HS' OOA boosted by 'Haute Cuisine'

Post by Rokcet Scientist »

An army marches on its stomach of course. It seems Homo Sapiens' army found a bountiful food source at the very nexus of its OOA exodus: the Red Sea. And that must be where his palate for refined food was conceived. He noshed giant clams! Yummie!

(BTW another one that could be put in any other of Archaeologica.org's sections, imo.)
BBC: Friday, 29 August 2008

New giant clam species discovered
By Elizabeth Mitchell

Image

A new species of giant clam has been discovered in the Red Sea.
Fossils suggest that, about 125,000 years ago, the species Tridacna costata accounted for more than 80% of the area's giant clams.

The species may now be critically endangered, researchers report in Current Biology journal.

The scientists believe their findings may represent one of the earliest examples of the over-exploitation of marine organisms by humans.

T. costatahas "very peculiar characteristics" that set it apart from two other species of giant clam that are also found in the area.

The Latin word costatus means "ribbed" and T. costata has a disitinctive, zig-zag outline to its shell.

"The new species are mid-sized clams - up to 40cm long and a couple of kilograms heavy," explained co-author Dr Claudio Richter, from the Alfred-Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research, Germany.

The new species has a distant relative, T. gigas, which can grow up to 1.4m long.

Live specimens of T. costata appear to be restricted to very shallow waters. Other species were also found in deeper reef zones.

The clam has an earlier and shorter breeding season that coincides with the seasonal plankton bloom. Genetic analysis confirmed the status of the new species.

'Time travel'
"One of the great features of the desert-enclosed Red Sea is that you can literally time-travel from the present, several hundred thousand years into the past," said Dr Richter.

The research team uncovered well-preserved fossil evidence that suggested stocks of these giant clams plummeted some 125,000 years ago - during an interval between Ice Ages.

They believe this period coincides with the appearance of modern humans in the Red Sea area.

Giant clams were abundant, large in size and easily accessible - making them an attractive food source for hunter-gatherers.

In "pre-human times", T. costata may have been up to 60cm long. Since then, shell size has also decreased dramatically.

"The overall decline in giant clam stocks - with the striking loss of large specimens - is a smoking gun indicating over-harvesting," said Dr Richter.

The scientists were not expecting to find a new species in an area as well studied as the Red Sea.

The research highlights how little is known about marine biodiversity in general, the scientists said.

"The coral reefs in particular... may still harbour very large surprises," said Dr Richter.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/7588857.stm

Makes one wonder what Dmanisi Man's diet was on his long march, 1.7 million years before HS, doesn't it?
kbs2244
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Post by kbs2244 »

I always wondered just how hungry the first guy to eat a snail was.
It must have been somewhere is France.
Minimalist
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Post by Minimalist »

I'd have to be pretty hungry.
Something is wrong here. War, disease, death, destruction, hunger, filth, poverty, torture, crime, corruption, and the Ice Capades. Something is definitely wrong. This is not good work. If this is the best God can do, I am not impressed.

-- George Carlin
Rokcet Scientist

Post by Rokcet Scientist »

kbs2244 wrote:I always wondered just how hungry the first guy to eat a snail was.
It must have been somewhere is France.
I still wonder just how bereft of taste buds one must be to eat the first MacDonald's pre-digested 'hamburger', and declare they like it, while it really is as if it came from someone's stomach...
kbs2244
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Joined: Wed Jul 12, 2006 12:47 pm

Post by kbs2244 »

While I agree with you on the current menu,
I do have to say that, as a customer of the original “McDonalds No. 1” in Des Plaines, IL, I admire them.
(I watched Number One being built, and my brother worked there)
Their original burger had to compete with the traditional drive-in burger.
(“The only thing French on the menu was fries.”)
They were not anything special in those days.
They are traditional success story.
If people didn’t come, they would not be what they are.
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