Fraggle Rocker
06-10-06, 04:47 PM
According to a blurb in last week's Washington Post, an archeological dig near Jericho turned up the remains of figs that were clearly not natural wild varieties. They were softer and more edible than the ancestral species and most importantly they were sterile so they had to be propagated by cultivating cuttings rather than natural seeding.
The remains are dated to 9,400BCE. This is a full thousand years earlier than grains like wheat and barley, which were thought to be the first domesticated crops.
The domestication of plants made it possible for people to build permanent settlements. They were able to produce more food in a given area than could be gathered from nature, so they no longer had to be nomads constantly migrating to keep up with nature's meager harvest.
Agriculture and permanent villages mark the transition from the Mesolithic Era (Middle Stone Age) to the Neolithic Era (Late Stone Age). Agriculture arose independently in several regions, but archeological evidence has always indicated that it was first invented in the Middle East and this discovery does not change that. Bountiful fishing areas also fostered the creation of stationary villages, but this vector does not seem to have had as big an impact on the development of human society as farming.
The Agricultural Revolution--the dawn of the Neolithic Era--is regarded as one of the three "paradigm shifts" in human history. The other two are the Industrial Revolution and the Computer Age--which if you ask me is still a little early to send out the announcements.
The Agricultural Revolution began at least a thousand years earlier than was previously thought.
The remains are dated to 9,400BCE. This is a full thousand years earlier than grains like wheat and barley, which were thought to be the first domesticated crops.
The domestication of plants made it possible for people to build permanent settlements. They were able to produce more food in a given area than could be gathered from nature, so they no longer had to be nomads constantly migrating to keep up with nature's meager harvest.
Agriculture and permanent villages mark the transition from the Mesolithic Era (Middle Stone Age) to the Neolithic Era (Late Stone Age). Agriculture arose independently in several regions, but archeological evidence has always indicated that it was first invented in the Middle East and this discovery does not change that. Bountiful fishing areas also fostered the creation of stationary villages, but this vector does not seem to have had as big an impact on the development of human society as farming.
The Agricultural Revolution--the dawn of the Neolithic Era--is regarded as one of the three "paradigm shifts" in human history. The other two are the Industrial Revolution and the Computer Age--which if you ask me is still a little early to send out the announcements.
The Agricultural Revolution began at least a thousand years earlier than was previously thought.