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Archaeologists seeking clues
about the life of settlers in early America are the latest experts
to make use of an Agricultural Research Service special collection
of more than 8,000 types of pollen. ARS scientist Gretchen D.
Jones's collection of glass slides and light and scanning electron
micrographs (SEMs)--a type of highly detailed photograph--of
various pollen species will be featured tonight on a Public Broadcasting
Service science special. The study of pollen is called palynology.
Previously, the Smithsonian
Institution in Washington, D.C., and the National Center for
Ecological Analysis and Synthesis in Santa Barbara, Calif., have
utilized Jones' collection of pollen, the dusty mass of tiny,
yellow microspores produced by seed plants. The collection is
maintained at the ARS Areawide Pest Management Research Unit
(APMRU) in College Station, Texas.
The collection, started in
1988, now contains more than 8,200 types, or taxa, of pollen
from the United States, Canada, Brazil, Belize and Mexico. The
main emphasis of the collection is pollen taxa from Texas. Jones'
collection stands out because it includes all three types of
sample records--glass slides, as well as two types of micrographs.
Other collections generally contain only one or two of these
forms.
It's the SEMs that make Jones' collection so sought after. These
photographs provide an x-ray type of image that can show minute
details of something as small as a pollen grain. Pollen grain
SEMs can be analyzed by archaeologists who want to learn which
plants would have produced the pollen found on ancient fossils.
Today, the PBS Scientific American
Frontiers program premiers its "Unearthing Secret America"
episode. It focuses on archeological finds in Jamestown, and
Williamsburg, Va.; and at Monticello, Thomas Jefferson's home
in Charlottesville, Va. They shed light on life in early America--particularly
on the origins and growth of slavery.
Portions of Jones' pollen collection will be shown in this episode
to illustrate how archaeologists analyzed pollen to determine
what settlers ate, what medicinal plants they used, and whether
they were hunters or gatherers.
More information on the collection
can be found on the Internet at: http://pollen.usda.gov
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Kim Flottum
Editor, Bee Culture Magazine
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