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6000 YEAR OLD CHILI PEPPERS FOUND
Researchers, including a paleoethnobotanist at the
University of Missouri-Columbia, found fossil evidence in seven archaeological
sites ranging from the Bahamas to present-day Peru that showed people were
eating domesticated chili peppers as long as 6,000 years ago. This makes chili
peppers one of the oldest domesticated food sources in the Americas. The study
was published in the Feb. 15, 2007 edition of the journal Science.
"Before
our research, there wasn't much archaeological evidence to show that prehistoric
people in Central and South America were eating domesticated chili peppers,"
said Deborah Pearsall, professor of anthropology in MU's College of Arts and
Science. "Chili peppers don't preserve well because when you cook with them, you
eat most of them; you don't have husks or shells that are thrown away and
preserved. That's why we used a technique that involved analyzing microscopic
starch grains on cooking and grinding tools to find this new evidence."
Pearsall, who studied tools from sites in Ecuador and the
Bahamas, teamed with a group of scientists doing research in various locations
in Central and South America; the project was led by Linda Perry, a research
associate at the Smithsonian National Museum of Nature History's Archaeobiology
Program. Perry discovered an unknown microfossil starch grain while doing
research in Venezuela, and when the other researchers compared notes, they
realized that their work in the Bahamas, Panama, Ecuador and Peru also revealed
the same unknown starch grain. After studying the starches of many domesticated
and wild plants, Perry determined that the mystery starch was a chili pepper.
"We knew from historic and ethnographic records that people
were eating domesticated chili peppers, but this archaeological evidence
confirms those findings. It also shows us that chili peppers are one of the
oldest domesticated food sources in the Americas and that people in distant
areas all ate them. This suggests that these groups might have had some type of
contact with each other," Pearsall said.
Loma Alta and Real Alto, the sites in southwestern Ecuador
studied by Pearsall, turned up the oldest starch of domesticated chili peppers,
at approximately 6,000 years old. Starch of the peppers in other sites ranged
from approximately 5,600 years to 500 years old. Under a microscope, the starch
grains appeared as large, flattened disks with shallow central depressions,
different from the appearance of starch grains from other foods.
This discovery enables researchers to gain a better picture
of ancient diets. By analyzing the grains on cooking tools, they were able to
determine that people used the same grinding stones to grind corn, chili peppers
and a root crop called manioc, and they probably combined these ingredients to
make soups, stews and other dishes. Pearsall found evidence of this diet on
grinding stones from four ancient households at Real Alto, leading her to
conclude that these foods were eaten by everyone, not just the commoners or the
elites.
Edited by Wendy J Betts
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