Op woensdag 4 oktober 2023 om 20:00:42 UTC+2 schreef JTEM is so reasonable:
Beneath Still Waters - Multistage Aquatic Exploitation of Euryale ferox (Salisb.) during the Acheulian
Naama Goren-Inbar cs 2014 Internet Archaeology 37 doi 10.11141/ia.37.1
Remains of the highly nutritious aquatic plant Fox nut Euryale ferox (Nymphaeaceae) were found at the Acheulian site of Gesher Benot Ya'aqov, Israel.
Here, we present new evidence for complex cognitive strategies of hominins as seen in their exploitation of E.ferox nuts.
We draw on excavated data & on parallels observed in traditional collecting & processing practices from Bihar, India.
We suggest: early Mid-Pleistocene hominins implemented multi-stage procedures: underwater gathering & subsequent processing: drying, roasting & popping of E.ferox nuts.
Hierarchical processing strategies are observed in the Acheulian lithic reduction sequences & butchering of game at this & other sites,
but are poorly understood as regards the exploitation of aquatic plant resources.
We highlight the ability of Acheulian hominins
- to resolve issues related to underwater gathering of E.ferox nuts during the plant's life cycle,
- to adopt strategies to enhance their nutritive value.
If true, this is proto agriculture.
They harvested plants and, according to this, dried them for future use.
And it SIGNIFICANTLY pre dates the first glimpses of agriculture inside the Holocene.
Like: Göbekli Tepe.
Supposedly, between the end of the last glacial period and the start of the Younger Dryas cooling, there was a thriving proto agricultural civilization(s)
in the Levant up into Anatolia. But these would be way, Way, WAY younger than what you cite, if true.
Imagine: Aquatic Ape giving rise to agriculture!
Rice (shallow water plant) is still mankind's most important food?
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