“…Starch grains, along with phytoliths and pollen, are plant microfossils, which are microscopic plant remains with unique morphologies that allow them to be identified in most cases to the family, genus or species of plant that produced them. Starch grains have been recovered from soils (Balme and Beck, 2002;Henry et al, 2004), stone tools dating from the Pleistocene through the Holocene periods (Barton, 2007;Fullagar et al, 2006;Pearsall et al, 2004;Piperno and Holst, 1998;Zarrillo et al, 2008) pottery (Crowther, 2005), and dental calculus (Boyadjian et al, 2007;Henry and Piperno, 2008;Piperno and Dillehay, 2008), and have been used to document diets of ancient animal and human groups, including plant domestication (Barton, 2007;Fullagar et al, 1996Fullagar et al, , 2006Loy et al, 1992;Pearsall et al, 2004;Perry et al, 2007;Piperno et al, 2000Piperno et al, , 2004Zarrillo and Kooyman, 2006), and even social and spatial organization of sites (Balme and Beck, 2002;Henry et al, 2004).…”