So sánh phương pháp
Xem các phương pháp đã chọn cạnh nhau; những hàng khác biệt được làm nổi bật.
| Lipid Residue Analysis× | Ancient DNA Analysis× | |
|---|---|---|
| Lĩnh vực | Khảo cổ học | Khảo cổ học |
| Họ | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| Năm ra đời≠ | 2008 | 2004 |
| Người khởi xướng≠ | Richard P. Evershed and the Bristol organic-geochemistry school | Svante Paabo and colleagues (foundational methodology) |
| Loại≠ | Analytical pipeline for identifying foodstuffs from organic residues preserved in pottery | Laboratory and computational pipeline for recovering and authenticating genetic data from archaeological remains |
| Công trình gốc≠ | Evershed, R. P. (2008). Organic Residue Analysis in Archaeology: The Archaeological Biomarker Revolution. Archaeometry, 50(6), 895-924. DOI ↗ | Paabo, S., et al. (2004). Genetic Analyses from Ancient DNA. Annual Review of Genetics, 38, 645-679. DOI ↗ |
| Tên gọi khác | Organic Residue Analysis, Pottery Lipid Analysis, Absorbed Residue Analysis, Biomarker Residue Analysis | aDNA Analysis, Archaeogenetics, Ancient Genomics, Palaeogenetics |
| Liên quan | 2 | 2 |
| Tóm tắt≠ | Lipid residue analysis identifies the foodstuffs once processed, stored, or cooked in ancient pottery by recovering and characterizing the fatty molecules absorbed into the porous ceramic fabric. Lipids are hydrophobic, comparatively stable, and become trapped within vessel walls, where they can survive for millennia long after proteins and DNA have vanished, making them the most informative class of organic residue for reconstructing pot use. Richard Evershed and the Bristol school turned this insight into a rigorous analytical program — the 'archaeological biomarker revolution' — combining gas chromatography-mass spectrometry to identify diagnostic compounds with compound-specific carbon-isotope analysis of individual fatty acids to distinguish, for example, dairy from carcass fats and ruminant from non-ruminant sources. The result is direct molecular evidence of past diet and culinary practice from the vessels themselves. | Ancient DNA analysis recovers genetic information from the degraded remains of past organisms — human and animal bones and teeth, and increasingly sediments — and uses it to reconstruct kinship, ancestry, population history, sex, pathogens, and domestication. Because DNA fragments into ever-shorter pieces and accumulates characteristic chemical damage after death, and because a handful of modern molecules can swamp the few authentic ones, the field is defined less by sequencing itself than by an exacting protocol of clean-lab extraction, contamination control, and authentication. The foundational reviews by Svante Paabo and colleagues set out the principles that distinguish genuine ancient sequences from contaminants, and the move to next-generation sequencing transformed aDNA from a fragile curiosity into a routine source of genome-scale data. |
| ScholarGateBộ dữ liệu ↗ |
|
|