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The world’s first farmers have been traced to a 12,800 year-old Stone Age village in Syria using ancient dung – providing the earliest evidence of animals being reared to produce food for humans.
Remnants of the animal dung were found in soil gathered during excavations in Abu Hureyra in present day Syria – now a prehistoric archaeological site in the Euphrates valley – during the 1970s.
They were found to date back 12,800 years – suggesting people were tending sheep and possibly other livestock nearly 2,000 years earlier than previously thought.
‘It is really exciting to see that remnants of animal dung can help us track the differing ways that people interacted with animals early on,’ said lead-author Professor Alexia Smith from the University of Connecticut.
Researchers from the University of Connecticut and Durham University have found dung spherulites that indicate farming occurred up to 12,800 years ago. Pictured: A rectangular Neolithic period house lying above an older Epipalaeolithic oval-shaped hut, outside of which dung was found that they used as fuel
Dung spherulites seen in the samples from Abu Hureyra. Spherulites are microscopic calcium-based balls that form in the intestines of certain animals. They are roughly 5 to 20 microns (0.005 to 0.02 mm) in diameter
The Abu Hureyra site, close to the modern-day city of Raqqa in northern Syria, is currently submerged under Lake Assad following the closure of a dam.
However, it was first inhabited by settlers at the very end of the Palaeolithic or Stone Age, dating to between 13,300 and 11,400 years ago.
Different layers of habitation were then built on top of one another by hunter-gatherers for over 5,550 years.
Then, during the Neolithic period, farming and herding communities set up a series of villages at the site.
Evidence collected from these layers – including ancient seeds, animal bones, tools and building remains – give information on humans’ transition to animal agriculture.
Archaeologists would traditionally look to the shape of the remaining bones, that vary between wild and domesticated populations.
However, changes to the bone shape have been found to occur at the time of large-scale herding, long after the process animal domestication began.
Dung analysis is a relatively new way of finding early evidence of this move.
To shed new light on the timeline, the UK and US teams analysed soil samples that were first gathered at Abu Hureyra during excavations in the 1970s.
They contained an accumulation of spherulites – microscopic calcium-based balls which form in the intestines of many herbivores and pass through into their faeces.
These can be found in accumulations of dung left where live animals were once kept, providing information about the period when settlers first brought them to the site but before full domestication.
The samples were found outside an ancient mud hut, which enabled the researchers to approximately date when the dung deposits were made to the Epipaleolithic period.
Reconstruction of the hunter-gather hut dating to the Epipalaeolithic period showing a person sitting on the area outside of the hut where dung had accumulated
The Abu Hureyra site, close to the modern-day city of Raqqa in northern Syria, is currently submerged under Lake Assad following the closure of a dam
In a paper published today in PLOS One, they reveal that hunter-gatherers were bringing live animals, likely sheep, to the site between 12,800 and 12,300 years ago.
They would have been burning their dung as fuel as it built up outside the hut, as additional dung signatures were found near a hearth inside.
Professor Alexia Smith said: ‘This is almost 2,000 years earlier than what we have seen elsewhere, although it is in line with what we might expect for the Euphrates Valley.
‘As hunter-gatherers began to experiment, bringing live animals to the site — even if it was for a short period of time — they would have had no idea of the massive societal changes they were setting in motion.
‘The way we live today rests heavily on this shift from a reliance on hunting and gathering wild plants and animals to a dependence on growing and herding our food.’
Archaeological sediment from Abu Hureyra being ‘floated’ during the early 1970s to extract charred organic remains including seeds and wood charcoal. The dung spherulites were found in these samples
Professor Peter Rowley-Conwy from Durham University contributed to the research by studying animal bones from Abu Hureyra, which gave further insight into the species targeted by the ancient hunter-gatherers.
They began to increasingly rely on the sheep to supplement a diet based mostly on hunted gazelle, although they also caught small game such as birds, hare, and fox.
Professor Rowley-Conwy said: ‘The people living at Abu Hureyra at the time were tending the very earliest domestic sheep which were small-scale household animals, not a big herd like we might expect to see today.’
Eventually, in the Neolothic period between about 10,600 and 7,800 years ago, herded sheep and goat became more important than hunted animals.
A drop in spherulite levels at the site may correspond with the rise of larger-scale herding of animals farther away from dwellings.
They would have still been burning the dung as fuel, but also used it to prepare plaster floors.
People also replaced their basic huts with mudbrick houses, adding to the dung evidence that they were bringing small numbers of live animals to keep at the site.
The findings provide evidence that ancient people began developing animal management practices during or even before the development of plant cultivation.
In future research, the archaeologists plan to determine how common similar early animal-tending practices may have been at other sites in Southeast Asia.