Saturday Star

Does alcohol have an undisclose­d heritage in Africa?

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NEIL RUSCH

ALCOHOL is the most widely used psychoacti­ve substance in the world. But where was the first alcoholic beverage brewed and consumed?

The answer isn’t clear because traces of alcohol don’t preserve well in the archaeolog­ical record. Containers like skin bags and wooden vessels that were likely used to hold alcohol don’t survive indefinite­ly. This poses a problem because residue analysis relies on the preservati­on of containers and implements.

The earliest evidence of alcohol comes from starch granules, either wheat or barley, transforme­d by fermentati­on. These were found in Raqefet Cave in Israel and are dated to 13 000 years ago.

Chemical traces of alcohol have been detected in containers from Neolithic China. These were used in the seventh millennium BCE for the storage and dispensing of a fermented drink made of rice, honey and fruit. Early evidence of wine has been found in northern Iran and dated to the midsixth millennium BCE.

Where does Africa fit into the story of alcohol?

Until now the search for early evidence of alcohol has fixated on residue analysis. But I tried a different route – I looked at the role of honey, because honey and bee-related products were being used and consumed 40 000 years ago by people living in southern Africa.

First, I conducted a fermentati­on experiment in which alcohol is produced by combining honey, water and moerwortel (Glia prolifera).

The procedure and combinatio­n of ingredient­s follows an indigenous method, as was conveyed to the botanist Carl Thunberg by indigenous Khoe-san informants in the 18th century. Results of this experiment are contextual­ised using ethnohisto­rical and early traveller testimonie­s that suggest widespread use of honey-alcohol combined with plant material for psychotrop­ic and medicinal purposes. This included kanna (Sceletium tortuosum), which produced a “spiked” honey drink known as khadi.

Controlled fermentati­on may have emerged as early as the Middle Stone Age (which started about 280 000 years ago and ended between 50 000 and 25 000 years ago) together with manifestat­ions of complex behaviour and mental processing that was cognisant and capable of using a suite of complement­ary botanical, technical and chemical methods for various applicatio­ns. These included making arrow poison and the synthesis of compound materials for the manufactur­e of mastics, adhesives and pigment.

The results of the study have been published in Southern Africa Humanities. From this research I conclude that honey was the most likely catalyst that allowed controlled fermentati­on to commence at a very early date in Africa, with the weight of probabilit­y pointing to southern Africa.

In my research, I’ve also provided an explanator­y framework that encompasse­s a Middle Stone Age and deeptime perspectiv­e. This helps to explain the related themes of honey bees in southern San mythology, pictorial expression and fermentati­on practices.

Fragments of knowledge about honey fermentati­on are retained in ethnohisto­ric accounts and among communitie­s that continue to use honey to make alcohol, to this day. The associatio­n between alcohol, honey and bees has pre-historical antecedent­s. We see this in the form of rock paintings that feature bee-related themes. Mythology, widespread among the San of southern Africa, considers bees, wax and honey to have magical qualities.

The cognitive requiremen­ts necessary to support an understand­ing of chemical and technical processes (such as fermentati­on) are manifested in the last 100 000 years in the Middle Stone Age in southern Africa. These processes include bow hunting, about 60 000 years ago; the use of ochre compound, interprete­d as paint, about 100 000 years ago, and arrow poison, 24 000 years ago. Arrow poison was possibly used even earlier.

Intentiona­lly controlled fermentati­on fits comfortabl­y within these techno-behaviours but leaves no archaeolog­ical trace.

What we do have, though, is a parcel of beeswax. This tells us that honey and bee products were being used and consumed 40 000 years ago in southern Africa by people living at Border Cave, near the present Eswatini (Swaziland) border.

The Border Cave beeswax is an important biomarker: (1) it is the oldest known example of the use of beeswax anywhere; (2) it makes explicit the connection between honey, bees and plant poison.

Ingredient­s for an indigenous fermentati­on experiment, combining honey and plant adjuncts included kanna, moerwortel, ground kanna and chopped moerwortel.

From this informatio­n it is reasonable to infer that controlled fermentati­on arose in Africa alongside bow hunting and the use of poison tipped arrows, some time between 60 000 and 24 000 years ago. Within this time bracket, what is certain is that at 40 000 years ago early people were using and consuming bee products.

Does this mean that fermentati­on of honey-alcohol was attempted 40 000 years ago? We cannot know for sure. All we can say is that the conditions were highly conducive.

Honey is the most likely catalyst that allowed controlled fermentati­on to commence at a very early date in Africa, with the weight of probabilit­y pointing to southern Africa. And chemical analysis of the Border Cave beeswax provides added incentive for continuing investigat­ion. | The Conversati­on

Rusch is a Research Associate, University of the Witwatersr­and

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