Ancient dirty dishes reveal decades of questionable findings

An interdisciplinary team of Cornell researchers – ranging from classicists to food scientists to engineers – has determined that organic residues of plant oils are poorly preserved in calcareous soils from the Mediterranean. This means decades of archaeologists have likely misidentified olive oil in ceramics, failing to recognize other plant oils or perhaps mistaking them for animal fat.
Read the story in the Cornell Chronicle.

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Claire Challancin and Jaimie Luria in Ph.D. regalia
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Rebecca Gerdes and Jillian Goldfarb in the Lab
Postdoctoral researcher Rebecca Gerdes, Ph.D. ’24, (left) and Jillian Goldfarb, associate professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering, led an interdisciplinary team that determined that organic residues of plant oils are poorly preserved in calcareous soils from the Mediterranean. Charissa King-O’Brien/Cornell Engineering
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