date: 2013-02-12T23:19:45Z pdf:PDFVersion: 1.5 pdf:docinfo:title: The Paleobiolinguistics of Domesticated Chili Pepper (Capsicum spp.) xmp:CreatorTool: PScript5.dll Version 5.2.2 access_permission:can_print_degraded: true subject: Paleobiolinguistics employs the comparative method of historical linguistics to reconstruct the biodiversity known to human groups of the remote, unrecorded past. Comparison of words for biological species from languages of the same language family facilitates reconstruction of the biological vocabulary of the family?s ancient proto-language. This study uses paleobiolinguistics to establish where and when chili peppers (Capsicum spp.) developed significance for different prehistoric Native American groups. This entails mapping in both time and geographic space proto-languages for which words for chili pepper reconstruct. Maps show the broad distribution of Capsicum through Mesoamerica and South America mirroring its likely independent domestication in these regions. Proto-language dates indicate that human interest in chili pepper had developed in most of Latin America at least a millennium before a village-farming way of life became widespread. dc:format: application/pdf; version=1.5 pdf:docinfo:creator_tool: PScript5.dll Version 5.2.2 access_permission:fill_in_form: true pdf:encrypted: false dc:title: The Paleobiolinguistics of Domesticated Chili Pepper (Capsicum spp.) modified: 2013-02-12T23:19:45Z cp:subject: Paleobiolinguistics employs the comparative method of historical linguistics to reconstruct the biodiversity known to human groups of the remote, unrecorded past. Comparison of words for biological species from languages of the same language family facilitates reconstruction of the biological vocabulary of the family?s ancient proto-language. This study uses paleobiolinguistics to establish where and when chili peppers (Capsicum spp.) developed significance for different prehistoric Native American groups. This entails mapping in both time and geographic space proto-languages for which words for chili pepper reconstruct. Maps show the broad distribution of Capsicum through Mesoamerica and South America mirroring its likely independent domestication in these regions. Proto-language dates indicate that human interest in chili pepper had developed in most of Latin America at least a millennium before a village-farming way of life became widespread. pdf:docinfo:subject: Paleobiolinguistics employs the comparative method of historical linguistics to reconstruct the biodiversity known to human groups of the remote, unrecorded past. Comparison of words for biological species from languages of the same language family facilitates reconstruction of the biological vocabulary of the family?s ancient proto-language. This study uses paleobiolinguistics to establish where and when chili peppers (Capsicum spp.) developed significance for different prehistoric Native American groups. This entails mapping in both time and geographic space proto-languages for which words for chili pepper reconstruct. Maps show the broad distribution of Capsicum through Mesoamerica and South America mirroring its likely independent domestication in these regions. Proto-language dates indicate that human interest in chili pepper had developed in most of Latin America at least a millennium before a village-farming way of life became widespread. pdf:docinfo:creator: Cecil H. Brown meta:author: Charles R. Clement meta:creation-date: 2013-02-12T23:00:25Z created: 2013-02-12T23:00:25Z access_permission:extract_for_accessibility: true Creation-Date: 2013-02-12T23:00:25Z Author: Charles R. Clement producer: Acrobat Distiller 10.1.3 (Windows) pdf:docinfo:producer: Acrobat Distiller 10.1.3 (Windows) pdf:unmappedUnicodeCharsPerPage: 28 dc:description: Paleobiolinguistics employs the comparative method of historical linguistics to reconstruct the biodiversity known to human groups of the remote, unrecorded past. Comparison of words for biological species from languages of the same language family facilitates reconstruction of the biological vocabulary of the family?s ancient proto-language. This study uses paleobiolinguistics to establish where and when chili peppers (Capsicum spp.) developed significance for different prehistoric Native American groups. This entails mapping in both time and geographic space proto-languages for which words for chili pepper reconstruct. Maps show the broad distribution of Capsicum through Mesoamerica and South America mirroring its likely independent domestication in these regions. Proto-language dates indicate that human interest in chili pepper had developed in most of Latin America at least a millennium before a village-farming way of life became widespread. Keywords: Archaeobotany; Capsicum spp.; crop origins; historical linguistics; Native American Indians; paleobiolinguistics; plant domestication; plant genetics access_permission:modify_annotations: true dc:creator: Charles R. Clement description: Paleobiolinguistics employs the comparative method of historical linguistics to reconstruct the biodiversity known to human groups of the remote, unrecorded past. Comparison of words for biological species from languages of the same language family facilitates reconstruction of the biological vocabulary of the family?s ancient proto-language. This study uses paleobiolinguistics to establish where and when chili peppers (Capsicum spp.) developed significance for different prehistoric Native American groups. This entails mapping in both time and geographic space proto-languages for which words for chili pepper reconstruct. Maps show the broad distribution of Capsicum through Mesoamerica and South America mirroring its likely independent domestication in these regions. Proto-language dates indicate that human interest in chili pepper had developed in most of Latin America at least a millennium before a village-farming way of life became widespread. dcterms:created: 2013-02-12T23:00:25Z Last-Modified: 2013-02-12T23:19:45Z dcterms:modified: 2013-02-12T23:19:45Z title: The Paleobiolinguistics of Domesticated Chili Pepper (Capsicum spp.) xmpMM:DocumentID: uuid:1df14d0d-d3ec-4ff7-a0b3-bd18c4d1ecc1 Last-Save-Date: 2013-02-12T23:19:45Z pdf:docinfo:keywords: Archaeobotany; Capsicum spp.; crop origins; historical linguistics; Native American Indians; paleobiolinguistics; plant domestication; plant genetics pdf:docinfo:modified: 2013-02-12T23:19:45Z meta:save-date: 2013-02-12T23:19:45Z Content-Type: application/pdf X-Parsed-By: org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser creator: Charles R. Clement dc:subject: Archaeobotany; Capsicum spp.; crop origins; historical linguistics; Native American Indians; paleobiolinguistics; plant domestication; plant genetics access_permission:assemble_document: true xmpTPg:NPages: 11 pdf:charsPerPage: 4036 access_permission:extract_content: true access_permission:can_print: true meta:keyword: Archaeobotany; Capsicum spp.; crop origins; historical linguistics; Native American Indians; paleobiolinguistics; plant domestication; plant genetics access_permission:can_modify: true pdf:docinfo:created: 2013-02-12T23:00:25Z