On the basis of prior research, representatives of the Pitted Ware
Culture from the Stone Age have been known as hard-core sealers, or even
Inuits of the Baltic Sea. Now, researchers have discovered barley and
wheat grains in areas previously inhabited by this culture, leading to
the conclusion that the Pitted Ware Culture adopted agriculture on a
small scale.
A study carried out in cooperation with parties representing the
discipline of archaeology and the Department of Chemistry at the
University of Helsinki, as well as Swedish operators in the field of
archaeology (The Archaeologists, a governmental consultant agency, and
Arkeologikonsult, a business), found grains of barley and wheat in
Pitted Ware settlements on Finland's Aland Islands and in the region of
modern Stockholm.
The age of the grains was ascertained using radiocarbon dating.
Based on the results, the grains originated in the period of the Pitted
Ware culture, thus being approximately 4,300-5,300 years old. In
addition to the cereal grains, the plant remnants found in the sites
included hazelnut shells, apple seeds, tuberous roots of lesser
celandine and rose hips.
The study suggests that small-scale farming was adopted by the
Pitted Ware Culture by learning the trade from farmers of the Funnel
Beaker Culture, the latter having expanded from continental Europe to
Scandinavia.
Other archaeological artefacts are also evidence of close contact between these two cultures.
"The grains found on Aland are proof that the Pitted Ware Culture
introduced cultivation to places where it had not yet been practised,"
says Santeri Vanhanen, a doctoral student of archaeology at the
University of Helsinki.
Cereal perhaps used to brew beer?
The 5,000-year-old barley grain found on Aland is the oldest grain
of cereal ever found in Finland. The researchers also found a handful of
barley and wheat grains a few hundred years younger, representing
either common wheat or club wheat.
"We also dated one barley grain found in Raseborg, southern Finland.
This grain and the other earliest grains found in mainland Finland date
back some 3,500 years, some 1,500 years behind Aland according to
current knowledge," Vanhanen explains.
In prior studies, it has been extremely difficult to demonstrate
that the hunter-gatherer population would have adopted farming during
recorded history, let alone in the Stone Age. Research on ancient DNA
has in recent years proven that the spread of agriculture in Europe was
almost exclusively down to migrants.
"We find it possible that this population, which was primarily
specialised in marine hunting, continued to grow plants as the practice
provided the community with social significance."
From time to time, an abundance of pig bones are found at Pitted
Ware sites, even though pigs were not an important part of their daily
nourishment. For instance, the bones of more than 30 pigs were found in a
grave located on the island of Gotland.
"Members of the Pitted Ware culture may have held ritual feasts
where pigs and cereal products were consumed. It's not inconceivable
that grains might even have been used to brew beer, but the evidence is
yet to be found," Vanhanen continues.
Grain age determined through radiocarbon dating
The research relies primarily on archaeobotanical methodology, which
helps examine plant remains preserved in archaeological sites. In this
study, soil samples were collected from the sites, from which plant
remains were extracted using a flotation method. The plant remains are
charred; in other words, the grains and seeds have turned into carbon
after having come to contact with fire.
Plant remains can be identified by examining them through a
microscope and comparing them to modern plant parts. The age of
individual grains can be determined with radiocarbon dating, based on
the fractionation of the radioactive carbon-14 isotope. This way, the
age of a grain aged several millennia can be determined with a precision
of a few centuries.
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