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Abstract
Brain tissue is ubiquitous in the archaeological record. Multiple, independent studies report the finding of black, resinous or shiny brain tissue, and Petrone et al. [2020 “Heat-induced Brain Vitrification from the Vesuvius Eruption in C.E. 79.” N Engl J Med. 382: 383–384; doi:10.1056/NEJMc1909867] raise the intriguing prospect of a role for vitrification in the preservation of ancient biomolecules. However, Petrone et al. (2020) have not made their raw data available, and no detailed laboratory or analytical methodology is offered. Issues of contamination and misinterpretation hampered a decade of research in biomolecular archaeology, such that addressing these sources of bias and facilitating validation of specious findings has become both routine and of paramount importance in the discipline. We argue that the evidence they present does not support their conclusion of heat-induced vitrification of human brain tissue, and that future studies should share palaeoproteomic data in an open access repository to facilitate comparative analysis of the recovery of ancient proteins and patterns of their degradation.
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1 Institute of Archaeology, UCL, London, UK; Section for Evogenomics, Globe Institute, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark
2 School of Health and Life Sciences, Teesside University, Middlesbrough, UK
3 Department of Chemistry and Centre of Excellence in Mass Spectrometry, University of York, York, UK
4 Institute for Prehistory, Early History and Medieval Archaeology, University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany; Department of Archaeology, University of York, York, UK
5 Department of Neuroinflammation and National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, UCL Institute of Neurology, UCLH, London, UK; Moorfields Eye Hospital, London, UK; Department of Neurology, Neuroscience Campus Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands; Department of Ophthalmology, Neuroscience Campus Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands
6 Section for GeoGenetics, Globe Institute, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark
7 Archaeological and Forensic Sciences, University of Bradford, Bradford, UK
8 Section for Evogenomics, Globe Institute, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark; McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, Cambridge, UK