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Title

The early chronology of broomcorn millet (Panicum miliaceum) in Europe.

Authors

Motuzaite-Matuzeviciute, Giedre; Staff, Richard A.; Hunt, Harriet V.; Liu, Xinyi; Jones, Martin K.

Abstract

The majority of the early crops grown in Europe had their origins in south-west Asia, and were part of a package of domestic plants and animals that were introduced by the first farmers. Broomcorn millet, however, offers a very different narrative, being domesticated first in China, but present in Eastern Europe apparently as early as the sixth millennium BC. Might this be evidence of long-distance contact between east and west, long before there is any other evidence for such connections? Or is the existing chronology faulty in some way? To resolve that question, 10 grains of broomcorn millet were directly dated by AMS, taking advantage of the increasing ability to date smaller and smaller samples. These showed that the millet grains were significantly younger than the contexts in which they had been found, and that the hypothesis of an early transmission of the crop from east to west could not be sustained. The importance of direct dating of crop remains such as these is underlined.

Subjects

EUROPE; BROOMCORN millet; AGRICULTURAL history; ARCHAEOLOGY methodology; ACCELERATOR mass spectrometry; ARCHAEOLOGICAL dating; CROPS; NEOLITHIC Period

Publication

Antiquity, 2013, Vol 87, Issue 338, p1073

ISSN

0003-598X

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1017/S0003598X00049875

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