Search Site   
News Stories at a Glance
KDA’s All in for Ag Education Week features student-created book
School zone pesticide bill being fine-tuned in Illinois
Kentucky Hay Testing Lab helps farmers verify forage quality
Kentucky farmer turns one-time tobacco plot into gourd patch
Look at field residue as treasure rather than as trash to get rid of
Kentucky farm wins prestigious environmental stewardship award
Beekeeping Boot Camp offers hands-on learning
Kentucky debuts ‘Friends of Agriculture’ license plate
Legislation gives Hoosier vendors more opportunities to sell products
1-on-1 with House Ag leader Glenn Thompson 
Increasing production line speeds saves pork producers $10 per head
   
Archive
Search Archive  
   
News brief: Farming had earlier start than thought, study says

ISRAEL — The New York Times reported farming may have originated 23,000 years ago, thousands of years earlier than previously thought, according to a new study.
Researchers discovered a large number of seeds at an ancient hunter-gatherer site known as Ohalo II on the shore of the Sea of Galilee in Israel. Many of the seeds had scars, a mark that distinguishes domesticated species from wild forms.
Additionally, about 150,000 plant remains were retrieved from the site, comprising more than 140 species. The mix included 13 known weeds, as well as edible cereals like wild emmer, barley and oats.
The mix of weeds and cereals suggests that people were experimenting with agriculture at Ohalo II, said Marcelo Sternberg, an ecologist at Tel Aviv University and an author of the study. “These were the first cultivation trials going on,” he said. “This was part of a very long learning process that our ancestors went through.”
Sternberg and his colleagues, from Harvard University, Bar-Ilan University and the University of Haifa, reported their findings in the journal PLOS One. Until now, it was believed farming originated about 12,000 years ago in the region that now includes Iraq and parts of Turkey and Iran.
At Ohalo II, Dr. Sternberg and his colleagues also found a stone-grinding slab, from which they extracted cereal starch granules. The tool was probably used to process the grains for consumption.


7/29/2015