Earliest evidence of wine found in giant, 8,000-year-old jars

Source: Washington Post
By Ben Guarino
November 13

At the next holiday dinner, when the discussion turns to politics and you reach for a second glass of merlot, consider this: Your social lubricant has 8,000-year-old roots. People were fermenting grapes and storing wine in massive jugs as long ago as 6000 B.C., according to a study published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The new research pushes chemical evidence of wine 600 to 1,000 years before the previous oldest estimates.

“This is a big time jump,” said Patrick McGovern, an expert in ancient wines at the University of Pennsylvania Museum and an author of the new study. McGovern and his colleagues analyzed pottery jars found in the Eurasian country of Georgia that dated to the early Neolithic period.

Ancient Georgians could have stored 300 liters of wine in the jars, which are about three feet tall. Small clay bumps are clustered around the rim. These decorations, the researchers hypothesize, represent grapes.

McGovern is confident that the pottery is old. “The radiocarbon dating is very precise,” he said. “We know the dating within 200 years.” The jars were created between 6000 and 5800 B.C.

The new insights came from a break in tradition. It is common practice for archaeologists to clean ancient pottery with a gentle bath of a mild acid or base. The corrosives reveal details in the pottery often hidden beneath a crust of accumulated minerals. But these baths also erase any traces of organic compounds stuck to the pottery. In the latest excavation, the archaeologists skipped the chemical scrub. This allowed researchers to extract four organic compounds present in the potsherds: citric acid, malic acid, succinic acid and tartaric acid.

Taken together, the relatively high concentrations of these acids point to wine. “The tartaric acid establishes grapes,” said Andrew Waterhouse, who studies the chemistry of wine at the University of California at Davis and was not a participant in this research.

Grapes are the only fruit in the Georgian mountain region that produce tartaric acid, McGovern said. Although some dirt-dwelling microbes can generate organic acids, soil samples showed no signs of the chemicals at high concentrations.

Fermentation left its signature in the form of succinic acid. The combination of succinic and tartaric acid, Waterhouse said, “is completely convincing that this is grape wine.”

A few other clues pointed to fermented grapes, too. The researchers found botanical evidence in ancient grape pollen, starch and bits of grape skin.

“We can’t prove the alcohol,” McGovern said. That evaporated ages ago. But he doubts the Georgians were big into nonalcoholic juice. Since the last Ice Age, winemaking conditions in this region of the Caucasus have been ideal. In a warm and mild climate, raw grape juice starts to ferment in a day or two. And it was unlikely, he said, that the Georgians would have allowed wine to ferment into vinegar.

Wine flows through ancient Georgians’ culture. They drank wine to celebrate births and left wine cups and pitchers in tombs. In ancient Egypt, pharaohs and kings drank wine; in ancient Georgia, everyone did.

“It became economically important, just like the wine culture in California and Oregon,” McGovern said. “Once these fermented beverages take hold of a society, they tend to become the heart of the society.”

Waterhouse, who called McGovern the “worldwide authority” on early wines, said that this study probably pushes the limits of what can be learned from wine jar pottery. Pottery itself is about 20,000 to 12,000 years old; before that, humans used animal hide and other materials to store liquids.

“Using leather to hold wine is well-documented in the Bible and elsewhere,” Waterhouse said. But vessels made of skin don’t preserve as well as pottery.

McGovern said he would not be surprised if humans consumed fermented fruits before there was pottery. He pointed to primates who haven’t figured out pottery but know about booze. Vervet monkeys on the Caribbean island of St. Kitts steal cocktails from tourists. Chimpanzees in Guinea use leaves to sponge up fermented palm sap.

Grape cultivars in Georgia are closely related to wine staples such as Syrah and pinot noir grapes, the authors of the new study noted. As for what the wine tasted like, the experts don’t know, but they guessed it was cloudy with an aromatic or fruity taste.

“Very freshly fermented wines have a really distinctive fruitiness. It actually doesn’t come from the fruit. It comes from the fermentation process,” Waterhouse said. A modern analogue would be a Beaujolais nouveau, he said, bottled and sold as little as six weeks after harvest.

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

PHP Code Snippets Powered By : XYZScripts.com

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This