“…The field of paleoproteomics (here defined as the characterization of proteins from archeological and paleontological tissues using mass spectrometry [MS]) has grown exponentially since the first application of matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization (MALDI) MS to mammal remains 800–450 000 years old in 2000 . In the 22 years that followed, a variety of mass spectrometry-based methods have been used to investigate the preserved proteomic content of a diverse array of biological tissues (e.g., bones, teeth, baleen, turtle shell, mummified tissues), − objects (e.g., paintings, ethnologic objects, potsherds, parchment), − and species (e.g., mammoth, moa, giant beaver, whales, sea turtles). ,,,,,− However, the vast majority of these studies have focused on relatively young (<100 thousand years old) paleontological and archeological materials and remains. In this perspective, we discuss the development and progress of “deep time paleoproteomics (DTPp)”, here defined as MS characterization of material older than ∼1 million years (1 Ma).…”