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Featured researches published by Robert A. Benfer.


Economic Botany | 1998

Distinguishing rice (Oryza sativa poaceae) from wildOryza species through phytolith analysis, II Finalized method

Zhijun Zhao; Deborah M. Pearsall; Robert A. Benfer; Dolores R. Piperno

Asian rice is an important grain, not only in its homeland but in many areas of the world. Preliminary studies suggested that phytolith analysis, the identification of opaline silica bodies, provided a reliable way of identifying rice, especially in situations where preservation of charred botanical remains was poor. Results of this follow-up study, which incorporates all Asian wild Oryza species and a diverse array of traditional Oryza sativa cultivars, confirm that rice can be identified with a high level of certainty by the size and qualitative features of a distincitve phytolith, the double-peaked glume cell.RésuméLe riz d’Asie est une céréale importante, non seulement dans son pays d’origine, mais à travers le monde. Des études préliminaires suggèrent que l’analyze phytolithique—identification de particules de silica opalisé—fournit un moyen sur pour identifier le riz, surtout dans les cas de mauvais état de conservation des restes brulés organiques. Les résultats de cette étude de suite, incorporant toutes les espèces asiatiques d’Oryza sauvage et un groupe divers de formes traditionellement cultivées d’Oryza sativa, confirment le fait que le riz peut être identifié avec un haut degrès d’assurance par la taille et les traits qualitatifs d’un phytolithe distinctif, la glume bidentée.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Gourd and squash artifacts yield starch grains of feasting foods from preceramic Peru

Neil Duncan; Deborah M. Pearsall; Robert A. Benfer

In a study of residues from gourd and squash artifacts, we recovered starch grains from manioc (Manihot esculenta), potato (Solanum sp.), chili pepper (Capsicum spp.), arrowroot (Maranta arundinacea), and algarrobo (Prosopis sp.) from feasting contexts at the Buena Vista site, a central Peruvian preceramic site dating to ≈2200 calendar years B.C. This study has implications for the study of plant food use wherever gourds or squashes are preserved, documents the earliest evidence for the consumption of algarrobo and arrowroot in Peru, and provides insights into foods consumed at feasts.


Journal of Forensic Sciences | 2001

Bootstrap Methods for Sex Determination from the Os Coxae Using the ID3 Algorithm

David G. McBride; Michael J. Dietz; Matthew T. Vennemeyer; Sara A. Meadors; Robert A. Benfer; N. Louanna Furbee

This study presents a method for identifying small subsets of morphological attributes of the skeletal pelvis that have consistently high reliability in assigning the sex of unknown individuals. An inductive computer algorithm (ID3) was applied to a bootstrapped training set/test set design in which the model was developed from 70% of the sample and tested on the remaining 30%. Relative accuracy of sex classification was evaluated for seven subsets of 31 morphological features of the adult os coxae. Using 115 ossa coxarum selected from the Terry Collection, a selected suite of the three most consistently diagnostic attributes averaged 93.1% correct classification of individuals by sex over ten trials. Attribute suites developed collaboratively with three well known skeletal experts averaged 87.8, 91.3, and 89.6% correct. The full set of 31 attributes averaged 90.0% accuracy. We demonstrate a small set of three criteria, selected and ordered by ID3, that is more accurate than other combinations, and suggest that ID3 is a useful approach for developing identification systems.


Journal of Forensic Sciences | 1989

The Death and Mortal Remains of Francisco Pizarro

William R. Maples; Betty Pat Gatliff; Hugo Ludeña; Robert A. Benfer; William Goza

When Francisco Pizarro was assassinated in 1541, he was buried near the Cathedral of Lima, but was later moved into the crypt under the altar. In 1891 mummified remains were identified as those of Pizarro and placed in a sarcophagus on public exhibition. In 1977 bones were discovered in a walled over niche in the crypt. The skull was in a lead box engraved with Pizarros name. Which remains--the bones, or the mummy--are those of Pizarro? This question and more can now be answered. This paper will give evidence of the exact wounds that Pizarro received in his final sword fight, as well as a facial sculpture of the skull now identified as that of the conqueror of Peru.


American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2000

Genetic and environmental influence on the asymmetry of dermatoglyphic traits.

Ekaterina A. Pechenkina; Robert A. Benfer; Galina G. Vershoubskaya; Andrey I. Kozlov

Fluctuating asymmetry (FA) is defined as random deviations from bilateral symmetry of the body. Thus, its magnitude is often used to evaluate developmental homeostasis. In this study we evaluate the following hypotheses: 1) FA of dermatoglyphic traits has a significant genetic component; 2) prenatal maternal environment (PME) has a significant effect on the FA of dermatoglyphic traits in developmentally healthy individuals; and 3) genetic or environmental factors affect FA on organismal or systemic levels. Therefore, their effect is better seen in composite scores of FA rather than in FA indices for single traits. We analyzed 15 dermatoglyphic traits from 140 pairs of monozygous twins, 120 pairs of dizygous twins, and 106 pairs of mothers and daughters. All individuals were developmentally healthy. The influence of genetic and environmental factors on FA was evaluated by analysis of variance and regression analysis. For a majority of the traits in our study, FA showed significant but weak heritabilities, with values falling within the 0.20-0.35 range. None of the traits taken separately demonstrated the effect of PME on FA to be significantly greater than zero. The composite score of FA tended to have greater heritability values than individual traits. One of them, obtained in principal components analysis, showed a significant PME effect, supporting the hypothesis that FA is a systemic property.


Anatomical Record-advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology | 2015

The Tres Ventanas Mummies of Peru

L. Samuel Wann; Guido P. Lombardi; Bernadino Ojeda; Robert A. Benfer; Ricardo Rivera; Caleb E. Finch; Gregory S. Thomas; Randall C. Thompson

The Tres Ventanas mummies of Peru are thought to be among the oldest mummies in existence, dating to between 8,000 and 10,000 years ago. A preliminary assessment is made of the potential of these mummies for use in future research on mummified remains. Although the Tres Ventanas cave and the four mummies were explored and then excavated by Frederic Engel in 1966–67, and the project is named in his honor as the “Engel Study Group”, the importance of both the physical remains and the context in which they were found has only come to light in the last few years. Most important is the paleopathological examination of these remains, since these mummies are found in a high altitude area of Peru where adaptation to the limited partial pressure of oxygen is perhaps a key component in broadening our understanding of human diversity in past populations. Anat Rec, 298:1026–1035, 2015.


Antiquity | 2017

A prehistoric pyramid in the shape of a volcanic cinder cone, Nepeña Valley, Peru

Robert A. Benfer; Andrés Ocas

Archaeological work in the 1960s in the middle Nepeña Valley of coastal Peru (Figure 1) identified an artificial earthen mound or pyramid, approximately 15.5m high, with what was interpreted to be a crater dug into the top (Proulx 1968). This site has been variously known as Wanka, Huaca de Muro and El Bocón (PV31-55 in the Peruvian Ministry of Culture files). When viewed from a distance (Figure 2), the site resembles a volcanic cinder cone, such as the one in the Andahua Valley in southern Peru (Figure 3), and we have therefore named the site El Volcán. It should be noted, however, that there are no volcanoes in the vicinity of El Volcán to serve as models, nor indeed are any other examples of volcano-shaped structures known from Peru or elsewhere.


Reviews in Anthropology | 1975

The shapes of our ancestors: A nonanecdotal approach

Robert A. Benfer

Charles Oxnard. Form and Pattern in Human Evolution: Some Mathematical, Physical, and Engineering Approaches. Chicago.‐ University of Chicago Press, 1973, ix + 218 pp. Figures, bibliography, and index.


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2005

Reconstructing northern Chinese Neolithic subsistence practices by isotopic analysis

Ekaterina A. Pechenkina; Stanley H. Ambrose; Ma Xiaolin; Robert A. Benfer

12.50.


American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2002

Diet and health changes at the end of the Chinese neolithic: the Yangshao/Longshan transition in Shaanxi province.

Ekaterina A. Pechenkina; Robert A. Benfer; Wang Zhijun

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Neil Duncan

University of Central Florida

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Omar Ventocilla

National University of San Marcos

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Gloria Villarreal

National Agrarian University

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Miriam Vallejos

National Agrarian University

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Hugo Ludeña

Florida Museum of Natural History

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