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Wild-type (left) and domestic-type (right) scars in rachises of wild barley (Hordeum spontaneum) from Ohalo II. Scale bar – 1 mm [Credit: Snir A et al.] |
First is the higher-than-usual presence at the site of domestic-type, rather than wild-type, wheat and barley dispersal units. Second, the researchers noted a high concentration of proto-weeds - plants of the type known to flourish in fields planted with domesticated crops. Finally, analysis of the tools found at the site revealed blades used for cutting and harvesting cereal plants.
First author is Dr. Ainit Snir, part of whose doctoral research - conducted in Prof. Weiss' lab - is included in the present study.
An agricultural 'time capsule' hidden under the sea
The researchers' discovery was made at Ohalo II, a 23,000-year-old camp site of a community of hunter-gatherers that lived on the shore of the Sea of Galilee, Israel. The site is located 9 kilometers (5.5 miles) south of the modern city of Tiberias, and was discovered in 1989 when the level of the lake plummeted.
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The Sea of Galilee in Israel: Archaeologists made their discovery at a site called Ohalo II which was occupied at the height of the last Ice Age [Credit: Hanan Isachar/Alamy] |
According to Weiss, the study represents the earliest example of small-scale cultivation found anywhere in the world.
"The plant remains from the site were unusually well-preserved because of being charred and then covered by sediment and water which sealed them in low-oxygen conditions," Weiss explains. "Due to this, it was possible to recover an extensive amount of information on the site and its inhabitants - which made this a uniquely preserved site, and therefore one of the best archaeological examples worldwide of hunter-gatherers' way of life. Here we see evidence of repeated sowing and harvesting of later domesticated cereals."
From plant gathering to flour production
In the Ohalo II dwellings was a particularly rich assemblage of some 150,000 plant remains, showing that the site's residents gathered over 140 different plant species from the surrounding environment. Among these, Weiss's team identified edible cereals - such as wild emmer, wild barley, and wild oats. These cereals were mixed with 13 species of "proto-weeds" - ancient ancestors of the current weeds known to flourish in cultivated, single-crop fields - indicating that they grew and were subsequently unintentionally gathered together.
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A display at Haifa University's Hecht Musuem shows what the Ohalo II site may have looked like [Credit: Dani Nadel/Haifa University] |
Plants' statistics show genetic change linked with cultivation
Examination of the cereals found at the site shows an unusual percentage of domesticated-type, rather than wild-type, ear morphology. As Weiss explains, this change in the plant population is characteristic of a genetic mutation triggered when wild-type plants are sown repeatedly in cultivated fields.
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Some of the artefacts found at the Ohalo II site [Credit: Dani Nadel/Haifa University] |
As part of Snir's thesis, Weiss and Snir undertook field tests around Israel, establishing that stands of wild-type barley are characterized by a low level of this rough-scar appearance - about 10% of the total population. The study of Ohalo II's plant remains, however, revealed a greatly-increased incidence of 36% mutated domestic-type disarticulation units - proving that planned cereal sowing and harvesting in this ancient community had been underway for years.
Tools for harvesting
Another intriguing finding relates to a number of sickle blades - harvesting tools composed of sharp flint implements inserted in wood or bone handles - found at the site; these are among the oldest of their kind ever found.
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Sickle blade from the site. Scale bar – 10 mm [Credit: Snir A et al.] |
Weeds and planted fields
When studying the plants found at Ohalo II, the researchers were surprised to find a large number of plants similar to weeds previously seen only 11,000 years later than Ohalo II, at the traditional date for the beginning of agriculture. Does this indicate that agriculture indeed began much earlier than historians, archaeologists and botanists have traditionally believed? Weiss says that the isolated example on the shores of the Sea of Galilee is an insufficient basis for such a claim.
Dr. Dani Nadel, Head of the Department of Archaeology, summarizes the excavations
at Ohalo II, a uniquely well-preserved 23,000 year-old fisher-hunter-gatherer's camp
on the shore of the Sea of Galilee. [Credit: Academic Channel]
"From what we see at Ohalo II, it is clear that cultivation occurred at this surprisingly early point in time, but we have no evidence that it continued in the region," Weiss says. "This is why we term our findings to be evidence of trial cultivation only. Moreover, since weeds are defined by botanists as plants that developed in response to human agriculture, we call the plants that share characteristics with weeds 'proto-weeds'."
A trial that preceded later-adopted practice
Prof. Marcelo Sternberg, a co-author of the paper who is an ecologist at the Department of Molecular Biology and Ecology of Plants at Tel Aviv University, claims that the findings are exceptional. "We are witnessing the earliest trial of cultivation combined with land-use changes that led to the appearance of the earliest weeds. The findings are a clear indication of early human disturbance of the natural ecosystem."
Weiss agrees, adding that the current study provides reason to rethink our ancestors' abilities. "Even prior to full-scale cultivation, humans clearly had some basic knowledge of agriculture and even more importantly, exhibited foresight and planning," Weiss says. "The current research results from this site, situated in the cradle of ancient civilizations, show our ancestors were cleverer and more skilled than we had assumed. Although full-scale agriculture did not develop until much later, the attempt had already begun."
Paper co-author Prof. Ofer Bar-Yosef, a prehistorian from Harvard University's Department of Anthropology, notes that "the history of the evolution of technology is littered with new inventions that were either not accepted by their society or simply failed. An historical example is Leonardo da Vinci, who, in his notebooks, designed several flying machines during the early 15th century. Even though da Vinci was on the right track, we had to wait until the 19th century before the Wright brothers got their first plane off the ground."
Source: Bar-Ilan University [July 23, 2015]