Water bottles replicated in the traditional method used by Native Californian Indians reveal that the manufacturing process may have been detrimental to the health of these people. The study is published this week in the open access journal Environmental Health.
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| Sabrina Sholts, Smithsonian research anthropologist and curator of physical anthropology, with a reference skeleton and a femur from an individual who suffered from rickets [Credit: Paul Fetters] |
Archaeological evidence and ethnohistorical records show that bitumen was used by Native Californian Indians for a variety of purposes including as a sealant for water containers, fixing arrowheads, and as a material for producing smoke signals. Ancient skeletal remains show that Native Californians suffered a health decline over time, but bitumen use as a health risk factor has not been explored until now.
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| This is one of the bitumen-lined water bottles created in the traditional method used by Native Californian Indians [Credit: Sabrina Sholts, Smithsonian Institution] |
Kevin Smith, co-author and PhD student from the University of California, Davis said: "In accordance with historical records We used a Monterey chert flake and a bird bone awl to weave baskets from soft rush plants from California. We sourced abalone shells to use as mixing dish and heated the bitumen with metavolcanic pebbles before applying to the basket by hand using a sea mammal bone."
Storing water in the bitumen-lined bottles did not cause a dangerous level of PAHs to leech out, even after storage for two months, according to measurements by Sebastian Warmlander and Cecilia Wallin at Stockholm University. Olive oil stored in the baskets quickly became contaminated, however, suggesting that storage of fatty foods could have been a health risk factor.
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| Traditional Chumash twined basketry bottle [Credit: Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History] |
Source: BioMed Central [June 23, 2017]









