Dental calculus reveals Mesolithic foragers in the Balkans consumed domesticated plant foods

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2016 Sep 13;113(37):10298-303. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1603477113. Epub 2016 Aug 29.

Abstract

Researchers agree that domesticated plants were introduced into southeast Europe from southwest Asia as a part of a Neolithic "package," which included domesticated animals and artifacts typical of farming communities. It is commonly believed that this package reached inland areas of the Balkans by ∼6200 calibrated (cal.) BC or later. Our analysis of the starch record entrapped in dental calculus of Mesolithic human teeth at the site of Vlasac in the Danube Gorges of the central Balkans provides direct evidence that already by ∼6600 cal. BC, if not earlier, Late Mesolithic foragers of this region consumed domestic cereals, such as Triticum monococcum, Triticum dicoccum, and Hordeum distichon, which were also the main crops found among Early Neolithic communities of southeast Europe. We infer that "exotic" Neolithic domesticated plants were introduced to southern Europe independently almost half a millennium earlier than previously thought, through networks that enabled exchanges between inland Mesolithic foragers and early farming groups found along the Aegean coast of Turkey.

Keywords: Mesolithic foragers; domesticated cereals; forager/farmer interaction; human dental calculus; starch analysis.

Publication types

  • Historical Article
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Agriculture / history*
  • Animals
  • Animals, Domestic
  • Balkan Peninsula
  • Crops, Agricultural / chemistry
  • Crops, Agricultural / history
  • Dental Calculus / chemistry
  • Dental Calculus / history*
  • Domestication
  • History, Ancient
  • Humans
  • Starch / chemistry*
  • Tooth / chemistry
  • Triticum / chemistry*
  • Turkey

Substances

  • Starch