Affiliation:
1. Archaeobiology Program, Department of Anthropology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC 20560, USA.
Abstract
Squash seeds, peduncles, and fruit rind fragments from Archaic period stratigraphic zones of Guilá Naquitz cave in Oaxaca, Mexico, are assigned to
Cucurbita pepo
on the basis of diagnostic morphological characters and identified as representing a domesticated plant on the basis of increased seed length and peduncle diameter, as well as changes in fruit shape and color, in comparison to wild
Cucurbita
gourds. Nine accelerator mass spectrometer radiocarbon dates on these specimens document the cultivation of
C. pepo
by the inhabitants of Guilá Naquitz cave between 10,000 to 8000 calendar years ago (9000 to 7000 carbon-14 years before the present), which predates maize, beans, and other directly dated domesticates in the Americas by more than 4000 years.
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
Reference20 articles.
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4. D. S. Byers Ed. The Prehistory of the Tehuacán Valley (Univ. of Texas Press Austin TX 1967) vol. 1.
5. K. V. Flannery Ed. Guilá Naquitz (Academic Press Orlando FL 1986).
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