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Exotic foods reveal contact between South Asia and the Near East during the second millennium BCE

Ashley Scott, Robert C. Power, Victoria Altmann-Wendling, Michal Artzy, Mario A. S. Martin, Stefanie Eisenmann, Richard Hagan, Domingo C. Salazar‐García, Yossi Salmon, Dmitry Yegorov, Ianir Milevski, Israel Finkelstein, Philipp W. Stockhammer, Christina Warinner

2020Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences100 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Significance Here we report the identification of staple and exotic food remains in Bronze and Early Iron Age dental calculus from the Southern Levant. The analysis of dietary plant microremains and proteins sheds new light on consumed exotic foods from South and East Asia during the second millennium BCE. We provide the earliest direct evidence in the Mediterranean to date for the consumption of sesame, soybean, probable banana, and turmeric. The recovery and identification of diverse foodstuffs using molecular and microscopic techniques enables a new understanding of the complexity of early trade routes and nascent globalization in the ancient Near East and raises questions about the long-term maintenance and continuity of this trade system into later periods.

Topics & Concepts

East AsiaMiddle EastGeographyMediterranean climateIdentification (biology)Bronze AgeAncient historyBiologyArchaeologyHistoryBotanyChinaArchaeology and ancient environmental studiesPacific and Southeast Asian StudiesIsotope Analysis in Ecology
Exotic foods reveal contact between South Asia and the Near East during the second millennium BCE | Litcius