Abstract
The origins of bread have long been associated with the emergence of agriculture and cereal domestication during the Neolithic in southwest Asia. In this study we analyze a total of 24 charred food remains from Shubayqa 1, a Natufian hunter-gatherer site located in northeastern Jordan and dated to 14.6–11.6 ka cal BP. Our finds provide empirical data to demonstrate that the preparation and consumption of bread-like products predated the emergence of agriculture by at least 4,000 years. The interdisciplinary analyses indicate the use of some of the “founder crops” of southwest Asian agriculture (e.g., Triticum boeoticum, wild einkorn) and root foods (e.g., Bolboschoenus glaucus, club-rush tubers) to produce flat bread-like products. The available archaeobotanical evidence for the Natufian period indicates that cereal exploitation was not common during this time, and it is most likely that cereal-based meals like bread become staples only when agriculture was firmly established.
Funder
Independent Research Fund Denmark
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Reference46 articles.
1. Popova T (2016) Bread remains in archaeological contexts. Southeast Europe and Anatolia in Prehistory Essays in Honor of Vassil Nikolov on His 65th Anniversary, eds Bacvarov K Gleser R (Habelt, Bonn), pp 519–526.
2. A methodological approach to the study of archaeological cereal meals: A case study at Çatalhöyük East (Turkey);González Carretero;Veg Hist Archaeobot,2017
3. Processing of wild cereal grains in the Upper Palaeolithic revealed by starch grain analysis
4. Bread, baking moulds and related cooking techniques in the Ancient Near East;Balossi Restelli;Food Hist,2014
5. Hayden B Nixon-Darcus L Ansell L (2017) Our ‘daily bread’? The origins of grinding grains and breadmaking. Materiality of Food ‘Stuffs’, Transformations, Symbolic Consumption and Embodiments, eds Steel L Zinn K (Rutledge, New York), pp 57–78.
Cited by
225 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献