Dietary ROOTS: Domestication, Diet, and Diseases

About the subcluster

Two reindeer in the entrance of a simple wooden hut
© Jens Schneeweiß

Humans are unique for their immense diversity in dietary intake, which has facilitated human adaptation to most environmental niches. This dietary flexibility is a major achievement of human culture. It is the result of a combination of the ability to develop new technologies that facilitate food production, diverse and highly evolved culinary traditions, and social rules that further shape human omnivore biology. Determining the origins of foodstuffs and uncovering how cultural practices and connectivities shape dietary intake is key to diagnosing the relationship between dietary changes, animal, human and plant phenotypes, and diseases.

Publications

Projects within the subcluster

Contact

Speaker of the subcluster:

Prof. Dr. Cheryl Makarewicz
Institute of Prehistoric and Protohistoric Archaeology
+49 431 880-3376
[email protected]

Deputy speaker of the subcluster:

Prof. Dr. rer. nat. Ben Krause-Kyora
Institute of Clinical Molecular Biology
+49 431 500-15142
[email protected]