Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-t5pn6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-24T15:24:09.005Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Large-scale cereal processing before domestication during the tenth millennium cal BC in northern Syria

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 February 2012

George Willcox
Affiliation:
Archéorient CNRS UMR 5133, Jalès, Berrias 07460, France (Email for correspondence: gwillcox@wanadoo.fr)
Danielle Stordeur
Affiliation:
Archéorient CNRS UMR 5133, Jalès, Berrias 07460, France (Email for correspondence: gwillcox@wanadoo.fr)

Extract

At Jerf el Ahmar in northern Syria the authors have excavated a settlement where the occupants were harvesting and processing barley 1000 years in advance of its domestication. Rows of querns installed in square stone and daub buildings leave no doubt that this was a community dedicated to the systematic production of food from wild cereals. Given the plausible suggestion that barley was being cultivated, the site opens a window onto a long period of pre-domestic agriculture. Rye was also harvested, its chaff used to temper mud walls.

Type
Research article
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd 2012

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abbès, F. 2007. Les débitages laminaires de la fin du PPNA (Jerf el Ahmar, Mureybet, Cheikh Hassan) in Astruc, L., Binder, D. & Briois, F. (ed.) Systèmes techniques et communautés du Néolithique précéramique au Proche-Orient: actes du 5e colloque international: Fréjus, du 29 février au 5 mars 2004: 127–36. Antibes: APDCA.Google Scholar
Boardman, S. & Jones, G.. 1990. Experiments on the effects of charring on cereal plant components. Journal of Archaeological Science 17: 111.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cauvin, J. 1977. Les fouilles de Mureybet (1971-1974) et leur signification pour les origines de la sédentarisation au Proche-Orient. Annuals of the American School of Oriental Research 44: 1948.Google Scholar
Cauvin, J. 1980. Mureybet et Cheikh Hassan, in Margueron, J. (ed.) Le Moyen Euphrate: zone de contacts et d'échanges: 2134. Strasbourg: Université des Sciences humaines.Google Scholar
Cauvin, M. C. & Stordeur, D.. 1978. Les outillages lithiques et osseux de Mureybet, Syrie (Fouilles Van Loon, 1965) (Cahiers de l'Euphrate 1). Paris: CNRS-CRA.Google Scholar
Colledge, S. 1998. Identifying pre-domestication cultivation using multivariate analysis in Damania, A., Valkoun, J., Willcox, G. & Qualset, C. O. (ed.) The origins of agriculture and crop domestication: 121131. Aleppo: ICARDA.Google Scholar
Coqueugniot, E. 2000. Dja'de (Syrie), un village à la veille de la domestication (seconde moitié du 9e millénaire av. J.-C.), in Guilaine, J. (ed.) Les premiers paysans du monde: 5571. Paris: Errance.Google Scholar
Cucchi, T., Vigne, J. D. & Auffray, J. C.. 2005. First occurrence of the house mouse (Mus Musculus Domesticus Schwarz & Schwarz, 1943) in the western Mediterranean: a zooarchaeological revision of subfossil occurrences. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 84: 429–45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dubreuil, L. 2004. Long-term trends in Natufian subsistence: a use-wear analysis of ground stone tools. Journal of Archaeological Science 31(11): 1613–29.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Edwards, P. C., Meadows, J., Sayej, G. & Westaway, M.. 2004. From the PPNA to the PPNB: new views from the southern Levant after excavations at Zahrat adh-Dhra 2 in Jordan. Paléorient 30(2): 2160.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fuller, D. 2007. Contrasting patterns in crop domestication and domestication rates: recent archaeobotanical insights from the Old World. Annals of Botany 100(5): 903–24.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Haïdar, A. 2004. Evolution de l'environnement au Levant nord de l'Epipaléolithique au présent à travers l'étude des microfaunes fossiles et actuelles. Unpublished PhD dissertation, Université Paris X-Nanterre.Google Scholar
Haaland, R. 2007. Porridge and pot, bread and oven: food ways and symbolism in Africa and the Near East from the Neolithic to the present. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 17(2): 167–83.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Helmer, D., Gourichon, L. & Stordeur, D.. 2004. A l'aube de la domestication animale. Imaginaire et symbolisme animal dans les premières sociétés néolithiques du nord du Proche-Orient. Anthropozoologica 39(1): 143–63.Google Scholar
Ibañez, J.J. (ed.) 2008. Le site néolithique de Tell Mureybet (Syrie du Nord): en hommage á Jacques Cauvin (British Archaeological Reports international series 1843). Oxford: Archaeopress.Google Scholar
Ibanez, J. J., Gonzalez-Urqquijo, J. & Rodriguez-Rodriguez, A.. 2007. The evolution of technology during the PPN in the Middle Euphrates: a view from use-wear analysis of lithic tools in Astruc, L., Binder, D. & Briois, F. (ed.) Systèmes techniques et communautés du Néolithique précéramique au Proche-Orient: actes du 5e colloque international: Fréjus, du 29 février au 5 mars 2004: 153–65. Antibes: APDCA.Google Scholar
Kreuz, A., Marinova, E., Schäfer, E. & Wiethold, J.. 2005. A comparison of early Neolithic crop and weed assemblages from the Linearbandkeramik and the Bulgarian Neolithic cultures: differences and similarities. Vegetation History & Archaeobotany 14: 237–58.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kuijt, I. & Finlayson, B.. 2009. Evidence for food storage and predomestication granaries 11,000 years ago in the Jordan Valley. PNAS 106(27): 1096670.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rosenberg, M. 1999. Hallan Çemi, in Özdogan, M. & Basgelen, N. (ed.) Neolithic in Turkey: the cradle of civilization: new discoveries: 2534. Istanbul: Arkeolojive sanat Yayinlari.Google Scholar
Savard, M., Nesbitt, M. & Jones, M. K.. 2006. The role of wild grasses in subsistence and sedentism: new evidence from the northern Fertile Crescent. World Archaeology 38(2): 179–96.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schmidt, K. 2007. Göbekli Tepe, in Ozdogan, M. & Basgelen, N. (ed.) Türkiye' de Neolitik Dönem. Yeni kazilar, yeni bulgular: volume 1: 115-29, volume 2: 105–16. Istanbul: Arkeoloji ve Sanat Yayinlari, 2 vol.Google Scholar
Stordeur, D. 2003. Symboles et imaginaire des premières cultures néolithiques du Proche-Orient (haute et moyenne vallée de l'Euphrate), in Guilaine, J. (ed.) Arts et symboles du Néolithique à la protohistoire: 1537. Paris: Errance.Google Scholar
Stordeur, D. 2004. ‘Small finds and poor babies’. Quelques objets ‘divers’ du Mureybétien de Jerf el Ahmar, in Aurenche, O., Le Mière, M. & Sanlaville, P. (ed.) From the river to the sea: the Palaeolithic and the Neolithic on the Euphrates and in the northern Levant: studies in honour of Lorraine Copeland (British Archaeological Reports international series 1263): 309322. Oxford: ArchaeopressGoogle Scholar
Stordeur, D. 2006. Les bâtiments collectifs des premiers néolithiques de l'Euphrate. Création, standardisation et mémoire des formes architecturales in Butterlin, P., Lebeau, M., Montchambert, J. Y., Montero-Fenollos, J. L. & Müller, B. (ed.) Les espaces syro-mésopotamiens: dimensions de l'expérience humaine au Proche-Orient ancient: volume d'hommage offert à Jean-Claude Margueron (Subartu 17): 1931. Turnhout: Brepols.Google Scholar
Stordeur, D. 2010. Domestication of plants and animals. Domestication of symbols? in Bolger, D. & Maguire, L.C. (ed.) Development of pre-state communities in the ancient Near East: studies in honour of Edgar Peltenburg: 123–30. Oxford: Oxbow.Google Scholar
Stordeur, D. & Abbès, F.. 2002. Du PPNA au PPNB: mise en lumière d'une phase de transition à Jerf el Ahmar (Syrie). Bulletin de la Société Préhistorique Françise 99(3): 563–95.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stordeur, D., Brenet, M., Der Aprahamian, G. & Roux, J. C.. 2000. Les bâtiments communautaires de Jerf el Ahmar et Mureybet. Horizon PPNA. Syrie. Paléorient 26(1): 2944.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van Zeist, W. & Bakker-Heeres, J. A.. 1984 Archaeobotanical studies in the Levant 3. Late Palaeolithic Mureybet. Palaeohistoria 26: 171–99.Google Scholar
Van Zeist, W. & De Roller, G. J.. 1994. The plant husbandry of Aceramic Cayönü, E. Turkey. Palaeohistoria 33/34: 6596.Google Scholar
Watkins, T. 2010. New light on Neolithic revolution in south-west Asia. Antiquity 84: 621–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weiss, E., Wetterstrom, W., Nadel, D. & Bar-Yosef, O.. 2004. The broad spectrum revisited: evidence from plant remains. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 101(26): 9551–5.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Weiss, E., Kislev, M. & Hartmann, A.. 2006. Autonomous cultivation before domestication. Science 312: 16081610.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Willcox, G. 2002. Charred plant remains from a 10th millennium BP kitchen at Jerf el Ahmar (Syria). Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 11: 5560.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Willcox, G. 2004. Measuring grain size and identifying Near Eastern cereal domestication: evidence from the Euphrates valley. Journal of Archaeological Science 31: 145–50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Willcox, G. & Fornite, S.. 1999. Impressions of wild cereal chaff in pisé from the tenth millennium at Jerf el Ahmar and Mureybet: northern Syria. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 8: 2124.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Willcox, G., Fornite, S. & Herveux, L.. 2008. Early Holocene cultivation before domestication in northern Syria. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 19(1): 151–8.Google Scholar
Willcox, G, Buxo, R. & Herveux, L. 2009. Late Pleistocene and Early Holocene climate and the beginnings of cultivation in northern Syria. The Holocene 19(1): 151–8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yartah, T. 2005. Les bâtiments communautaires de Tell 'Abr 3 (PPNA, Syrie). Neo-Lithics 1(5): 39.Google Scholar