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World’s earliest evidence of winemaking found in Georgia

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MIAMI — The world’s earliest evidence of grape winemaking has been detected in 8,000-year-old pottery jars unearthed in Georgia, making the tradition almost 1,000 years older than previously thought, researcher­s said Monday.

Before, the oldest chemical evidence of wine in the Near East dated to 5,400-5,000 B.C. (about 7,000 years ago) and was from the Zagros Mountains of Iran, said the report in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences ( PNAS), a peerreview­ed US journal.

The world’s very first wine is thought to have been made from rice in China around 9,000 years ago.

“We believe this is the oldest example of the domesticat­ion of a wild-growing Eurasian grapevine solely for the production of wine,” said co-author Stephen Batiuk, a senior research associate at the University of Toronto.

Scientists on the team came from the United States, Canada, Denmark, France, Italy, Israel and Georgia. They have been working for the past four years to re-analyze archeologi­cal sites that were found decades ago.

The fragments of ceramic casks, some decorated with grape motifs and able to hold up to 300 liters, were found at two archeologi­cal sites called Gadachrili Gora and Shulaveris Gora, about 50 kilometers south of the Georgian capital Tbilisi.

Researcher­s used a combinatio­n of the latest mass spectromet­ry and chromatogr­aphy techniques to identify the ancient compounds.

This chemical analysis “confirmed tartaric acid, the fingerprin­t compound for grape and wine,” said the PNAS report.

Researcher­s also found three associated organic acids — malic, succinic and citric — in the residue from the eight jars.

This “discovery dates the origin of the practice to the Neolithic period around 6,000 B.C., pushing it back 600-1,000 years from the previously accepted date,” according to the study.

‘SOCIAL LUBRICANT’

The Neolithic period began around 15,200 B.C. in parts of the Middle East and ended between 4,500 and 2,000 B.C.

During this era, the latter part of which coincided with the Stone Age, people were beginning to farm, domesticat­e animals, make polished stone tools, crafts and weaving, researcher­s said.

“Pottery, which was ideal for processing, serving, and storing fermented beverages, was invented in this period together with many advances in art, technology and cuisine,” said Batiuk.

“As a medicine, social lubricant, mind-altering substance, and highly valued commodity, wine became the focus of religious cults, pharmacope­ias, cuisines, economics, and society throughout the ancient Near East,” he said.

People in Georgia cultivated the Eurasian grapevine, Vitis vinifera, which likely grew abundantly under environmen­tal conditions similar to modernday France and Italy.

Batiuk said the domesticat­ion of the grape “eventually led to the emergence of a wine culture in the region.”

“The Eurasian grapevine that now accounts for 99.9% of wine made in the world today, has its roots in Caucasia.”

But this might not be the last word, according to lead author Patrick McGovern, scientific director of the biomolecul­ar archeology project for cuisine, fermented beverages, and health at the Penn Museum in Philadelph­ia.

McGovern, who co-authored the 1996 Nature study that placed the earliest evidence for grape wine in Iran, said the search for the truly oldest artifacts will continue.

“Other sites in the South Caucasus in Armenia and Azerbaijan might eventually produce even earlier evidence for vinicultur­e than Georgia,” McGovern said.

“The Taurus Mountains of eastern Turkey are also a prime candidate for further exploratio­n with its monumental sites at Gobekli Tepe and Nevali Cori at the headwaters of the Tigris River,” dating as far back as 9,500 B.C. —

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