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HARVESTING THE PAST: |
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6 September - 30 November 1997 |
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Since the arrival of Europeans in the Americas, native American plants have been a focus of intense interest. By the 16th century, plants such as corn and sunflower were being sent to Europe for cultivation.
Today, 60% of the food consumed by humans is derived from four plant groups -- wheat and rice from Asia and corn (maize) and potatoes from the Americas.
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ARCHAEOLOGICAL ARTIFACTS ASSOCIATED WITH PLANT FOOD PRODUCTION AND PROCESSING. (65K) Left to right: mortar and pestle, stone hoe, and "nutting stone" |
Contrary to popular thinking, Native Americans, including Native Americans in Tennessee, became skilled landscape managers and food producers more than 2,000 years ago. Details are continually being revealed through the development of new techniques and technologies in a field called paleoethnobotany.
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Paleo ("old") + ethno ("people") + botany ("the science of plants") is the study of the interrelations between people and plants in prehistoric times. Just as people of the past left artifacts which have become evidence of their many activities, so too were left remains of their foods, such as charred nuts and seeds.
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TWO FLOTATION TANKS IN OPERATION. (35K) Soil is placed in the drums; carbonized plant remains float to the surface and are captured in fine mesh at the bottom of the buckets on the left. |
In the mid-1960s, intensive, long-term archaeological investigations associated with several Tennessee Valley Authority dam projects provided a laboratory for the development of new methods for the recovery and study of plant remains. Techniques such as water screening (washing soil through small-mesh screens) and flotation (mixing soil with water to allow the less dense plant materials to float) enabled the separation of plant remains from soil. Scanning electron microscopes (SEM) permitted the magnification of tiny plant parts thousands of times, and accelerator mass spectrometry, a specialized form of radiocarbon dating, allowed direct dating of the actual plant remains.
The processing of thousands of metric tons of deposits from archaeological sites in Tennessee over the past 25 years, and the analysis of the plant materials recovered from them, have documented the changes in plant foods and how people got them, briefly outlined below:
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16TH CENTURY ENGRAVING OF THE INDIAN TOWN OF SECOTA IN VIRGINIA. (151K) Shows gardens of corn, pumpkins, sunflowers, and tobacco. |
This exhibition chronicles the evolution of native Tennesseans from hunters and gatherers to successful farmers growing a crop of major importance. However, then -- as now -- these advances have not been free of inherent problems. An examination of human skeletal remains from the later agrarian times reveals a number of health complications, including dental caries (cavities) and signs of anemia due to an overdependence on corn in the diet.
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Today there is great concern and interest about health and fitness at all levels of society. Proper diet and nutrition are major components of a healthy lifestyle.
Much useful information regarding diet, nutrition, and health is in the exhibition, which includes nutrition facts for many of the plant foods in the exhibit, both wild and domesticated. Visitors can compare their diets with those of the past.
Below are just two examples of the kinds of comparisons that can be made. On the left is an unfamiliar but important food in the past -- acorn flour, and on the right is a familiar and important food from the past -- the sunflower.
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Intensive ethnobotanical research continues at the McClung Museum with new areas of focus coming to the fore.
The ethnobotany lab is involved in research on the extensive maize collections housed in the Museum in an effort to identify the variety and changes in maize in the region through time. This effort is coordinated with colleagues at other institutions in the hopes of identifying the genetic relationships of various corn varieties in order to better evaluate their strengths and weaknesses through analysis of DNA.
The McClung Museum is also working with The University of Tennessee Department of Botany to develop a Native American garden that will provide a living research laboratory for the study of native food plants.
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PLEASE NOTE: The exhibition logo at the top of this page, and the icons immediately above, illustrate five important plant foods for the Indians of prehistoric Tennessee: sunflower, marsh elder, hickory nuts, white oak acorns, and corn.
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For additional information on the subject of this exhibition, please see the accompanying list of Suggested Readings.
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The Website versions of other McClung Museum special exhibits are available at our Exhibition Archive.
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