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Aquaculture: prehistoric to traditional to modern
Moore, D.; Heilweck, M. (2022). Aquaculture: prehistoric to traditional to modern, in: Moore, D. et al. Aquaculture: ocean blue carbon meets UN-SDGS. pp. 65-95. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-94846-7_3
In: Moore, D.; Heilweck, M.; Petros, P. (2022). Aquaculture: ocean blue carbon meets UN-SDGS. Sustainable development goals series. Springer: Cham. ISBN 978-3-030-94845-0; e-ISBN 978-3-030-94846-7. XVII, 253 pp. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-94846-7, meer
In: Sustainable development goals series. Springer: Cham. ISSN 2523-3084; e-ISSN 2523-3092, meer

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  • Moore, D.
  • Heilweck, M.

Abstract
    It is pointed out that the human tradition of eating shellfish goes back to the time when Homo sapiens first started to migrate out of Africa, between 200,000 and 100,000 years ago. Archaeological finds of ancient meals of shellfish and ancient middens of shellfish shells track human migrations around the world. Middens do more than track migrations. They show that wooden artefacts and plant residues do not survive, but shells do.

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