The Neanderthal Meal: A New Perspective Using Faecal Biomarkers
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] Cristo M. Hernández,et al. Neanderthals from El Salt (Alcoy, Spain) in the context of the latest Middle Palaeolithic populations from the southeast of the Iberian Peninsula. , 2014, Journal of human evolution.
[2] Laura T. Buck,et al. Having the stomach for it: a contribution to Neanderthal diets? , 2014 .
[3] P. Gérard. Metabolism of Cholesterol and Bile Acids by the Gut Microbiota , 2013, Pathogens.
[4] H. Bocherens,et al. Middle Pleistocene ecology and Neanderthal subsistence: insights from stable isotope analyses in Payre (Ardèche, southeastern France). , 2013, Journal of human evolution.
[5] Cristo M. Hernández,et al. The black layer of Middle Palaeolithic combustion structures. Interpretation and archaeostratigraphic implications , 2013 .
[6] R. Bradley,et al. Climate impacts on human settlement and agricultural activities in northern Norway revealed through sediment biogeochemistry , 2012, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[7] C. Lalueza-Fox,et al. Neanderthal medics? Evidence for food, cooking, and medicinal plants entrapped in dental calculus , 2012, Naturwissenschaften.
[8] Hafizan Juahir,et al. Inorganic nitrogen, sterols and bacterial source tracking as tools to characterize water quality and possible contamination sources in surface water. , 2012, Water research.
[9] L. Kindler,et al. The evolution of hominin food resource exploitation in Pleistocene Europe: Recent studies in Zooarchaeology , 2012 .
[10] A. Henry,et al. Microfossils in calculus demonstrate consumption of plants and cooked foods in Neanderthal diets (Shanidar III, Iraq; Spy I and II, Belgium) , 2010, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[11] B. Hardy. Climatic variability and plant food distribution in Pleistocene Europe: Implications for Neanderthal diet and subsistence , 2010 .
[12] Erik Trinkaus,et al. Isotopic evidence for the diets of European Neanderthals and early modern humans , 2009, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[13] P. Goldberg,et al. Comment on “DNA from Pre-Clovis Human Coprolites in Oregon, North America” , 2009, Science.
[14] M. Hofreiter,et al. DNA from Pre-Clovis Human Coprolites in Oregon, North America , 2008, Science.
[15] D. Edwards,et al. Use of Sterol and Bile Acid Biomarkers to Identify Domesticated Animal Sources of Fecal Pollution , 2007 .
[16] P. Coombes,et al. Evaluating potential applications of faecal sterols in distinguishing sources of faecal contamination from mixed faecal samples. , 2007, Water research.
[17] M. Leclerc,et al. Bacteroides sp. Strain D8, the First Cholesterol-Reducing Bacterium Isolated from Human Feces , 2007, Applied and Environmental Microbiology.
[18] E. Trinkaus. European early modern humans and the fate of the Neandertals , 2007, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[19] O. Bar‐Yosef,et al. Mousterian vegetal food in Kebara Cave, Mt. Carmel , 2005 .
[20] C. Walters,et al. The Biomarker Guide , 2004 .
[21] P. Goldberg,et al. The exploitation of plant resources by Neanderthals in Amud Cave (Israel): The evidence from phytolith studies , 2002 .
[22] R. Evershed,et al. The origin of faeces by means of biomarker detection. , 2002, Environment international.
[23] R. Evershed,et al. An organic geochemical investigation of the practice of manuring at a Minoan site on Pseira Island, Crete , 2001 .
[24] P. Dutta,et al. Plant sterols in vegetables and fruits commonly consumed in Sweden , 1999, European journal of nutrition.
[25] E. Zanardi,et al. Calorific value and cholesterol content of normal and low-fat meat and meat products. , 1999 .
[26] R. Evershed,et al. 5β-Stigmastanol and Related 5β-Stanols as Biomarkers of Manuring: Analysis of Modern Experimental Material and Assessment of the Archaeological Potential , 1997 .
[27] N. Ashbolt,et al. Using faecal sterols from humans and animals to distinguish faecal pollution in receiving waters , 1996 .
[28] P. Nichols,et al. Use of capillary gas chromatography for measuring fecal-derived sterols application to stormwater, the sea-surface microlayer, beach greases, regional studies, and distinguishing algal blooms and human and non-human sources of sewage pollution , 1996 .
[29] D. Beitz,et al. Mechanism of cholesterol reduction to coprostanol by Eubacterium coprostanoligenes ATCC 51222 , 1996, Steroids.
[30] R. Evershed,et al. The Study of Molecular Markers of Human Activity: The Use of Coprostanol in the Soil as an Indicator of Human Faecal Material , 1994 .
[31] T. Midtvedt,et al. Conversion of Cholesterol to Coprostanol by the Intestinal Microflora During the First Two Years of Human Life , 1993, Journal of pediatric gastroenterology and nutrition.
[32] D. Topping,et al. White wheat flour lowers plasma cholesterol and increases cecal steroids relative to whole wheat flour, wheat bran and wheat pollard in rats. , 1993, The Journal of nutrition.
[33] H. C. Fryer,et al. Neutral sterol excretions in rats fed skim milk and skim milk yogurt diets. , 1992, Indian journal of medical sciences.
[34] M. Klohn,et al. Preservation and post-mortem transformations of lipids in samples from a 4000-year-old nubian mummy , 1990 .
[35] E. Lingaas,et al. Intestinal microbial conversion of cholesterol to coprostanol in man , 1990, APMIS : acta pathologica, microbiologica, et immunologica Scandinavica.
[36] J. Grimalt,et al. Assessment of fecal sterols and ketones as indicators of urban sewage inputs to coastal waters , 1990 .
[37] E. Mosbach,et al. Degradation of steroids in the human gut. , 1983, Journal of lipid research.
[38] D. S. Lin,et al. The steroids of 2000-year-old human coprolites. , 1978, Journal of lipid research.
[39] S. Gaskell,et al. Rapid hydrogenation of sterols in a contemporary lacustrine sediment , 1975, Nature.
[40] T. Wilkins,et al. Two patterns of neutral steroid conversion in the feces of normal North Americans. , 1974, Cancer research.
[41] G. De Pauw,et al. Biohydrogenation of sterols by Eubacterium ATCC 21,408--Nova species. , 1973, European journal of biochemistry.
[42] M. Floate. Decomposition of organic materials from hill soils and pastures: II. Comparative studies on the mineralization of carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus from plant materials and sheep faeces , 1970 .
[43] J. Murtaugh,et al. Sterols as a measure of fecal pollution. , 1967, Journal - Water Pollution Control Federation.
[44] P. Goldberg,et al. Steroidal biomarker analysis of a 14,000 years old putative human coprolite from Paisley Cave, Oregon , 2014 .
[45] H. Bocherens. Neanderthal Dietary Habits: Review of the Isotopic Evidence , 2009 .
[46] J. Hublin,et al. The evolution of hominin diets : integrating approaches to the study of palaeolithic subsistence , 2009 .
[47] P. Gérard,et al. Correlation between faecal microbial community structure and cholesterol-to-coprostanol conversion in the human gut. , 2005, FEMS microbiology letters.
[48] Kenneth E. Peters,et al. Biomarkers and isotopes in the environment and human history , 2005 .
[49] M. Le Bailly,et al. The state of the art of paleoparasitological research in the Old World. , 2003, Memorias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz.
[50] R. Evershed,et al. Combined Analysis of Bile Acids and Sterols/Stanols from Riverine Particulates To Assess Sewage Discharges and Other Fecal Sources , 2000 .
[51] P. Hartman,et al. Characterization of Eubacterium coprostanoligenes sp. nov., a cholesterol-reducing anaerobe. , 1994, International journal of systematic bacteriology.