Metabolomics in archaeological science: A review of their advances and present requirements

Author:

Badillo-Sanchez Diego1ORCID,Serrano Ruber Maria1ORCID,Davies-Barrett Anna1ORCID,Jones Donald J. L.23ORCID,Hansen Martin4ORCID,Inskip Sarah1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Archaeology and Ancient History, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK.

2. Leicester Cancer Research Centre, RKCSB, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK.

3. The Leicester van Geest MultiOmics Facility, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK.

4. Environmental Metabolomics Lab, Department of Environmental Science, Aarhus University, Roskilde, Denmark.

Abstract

Metabolomics, the study of metabolites (small molecules of <1500 daltons), has been posited as a potential tool to explore the past in a comparable manner to other omics, e.g., genomics or proteomics. Archaeologists have used metabolomic approaches for a decade or so, mainly applied to organic residues adhering to archaeological materials. Because of advances in sensitivity, resolution, and the increased availability of different analytical platforms, combined with the low mass/volume required for analysis, metabolomics is now becoming a more feasible choice in the archaeological sector. Additional approaches, as presented by our group, show the versatility of metabolomics as a source of knowledge about the human past when using human osteoarchaeological remains. There is tremendous potential for metabolomics within archaeology, but further efforts are required to position it as a routine technique.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference88 articles.

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2. A. M. Pollard Analytical Chemistry in Archaeology (Cambridge Univ. Press 2007).

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