Hearth site in Utah desert reveals human tobacco use 12,300 years ago
Until now, the earliest documented use of tobacco came in the form of nicotine residue found inside a smoking pipe from Alabama dating to 3,300 years ago.
After tobacco use originated among the New World's native peoples,
it spread worldwide following the arrival of Europeans more than five
centuries ago. Tobacco now represents a worldwide public health crisis,
with 1.3 billion tobacco users and more than 8 million annual
tobacco-related deaths, according to the World Health Organization.
"On
a global scale, tobacco is the king of intoxicant plants, and now we
can directly trace its cultural roots to the Ice Age," said
archaeologist Daron Duke of the Far Western Anthropological Research
Group in Nevada, lead author of the research published on Monday in the
journal Nature Human Behaviour.
The seeds belonged to a wild variety of desert tobacco, named Nicotiana attenuata, that still grows in the area.
"This species was never domesticated but is used by indigenous people in the region to this day," Duke said.
The
Great Salt Lake Desert today is a large dry lake bed in northern Utah.
The hearth site at the time was part of a vast marshlands, with a
chillier clime during the twilight of the Ice Age. It is called the
Wishbone site owing to duck wishbones found in the hearth.
The
hearth remnants were found eroding out of the barren mud flats where
wind has been peeling away sediment layers since the marshlands dried up
about 9,500 years ago.
"We
know very little about their culture," Duke said of the
hunter-gatherers. "The thing that intrigues me the most about this find
is the social window it gives to a simple activity in an undocumented
past. My imagination runs wild."
Artifacts
there included small sharp stone cutting tools and spear tips made of a
volcanic glass called obsidian, used for hunting large mammals. One
spear tip bore the remains of blood proteins from a mammoth or mastodon -
elephant relatives that later went extinct.
"We
surmise that tobacco must have figured into the ecological knowledge
base of those who settled the interior of the North American continent,
some 13,000-plus years ago," Duke said.
Tobacco
domestication occurred thousands of years later elsewhere on the
continent, in the Southwestern and Southeastern United States and in
Mexico, Duke added.
"We
don't know when exactly tobacco was domesticated, but there was a great
florescence of agriculture in the Americas within the last 5,000 years.
Evidence for the use of tobacco, both direct - seeds, residue - and
indirect - such as pipes - increases during these times alongside the
domestication of food crops," Duke added.
Some
scholars have argued that tobacco may have been the first plant
domesticated in North America - and for sociocultural rather than food
purposes.
"There
is no doubt that people would have already been at least casually
tending, manipulating and managing tobacco well before the population
and food-requirement incentives that drove investments in agriculture,"
Duke said.
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