Plants widely used as
containers arrived, already domesticated, some 10,000 years ago
CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Dec. 13, 2005 -- Thick-skinned bottle gourds widely
used as containers by prehistoric peoples were likely brought to the
Americas some 10,000 years ago by individuals who arrived from Asia,
according to a new genetic comparison of modern bottle gourds with
gourds found at archaeological sites in the Western Hemisphere. The
finding solves a longstanding archaeological enigma by explaining how a
domesticated variant of a species native to Africa ended up millennia
ago in places as far removed as modern-day Florida, Kentucky, Mexico and
Peru.
The work, by a team of anthropologists and biologists from Harvard
University, the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Natural
History, Massey University in New Zealand and the University of Maine,
appears this week on the web site of the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences.
Integrating genetics and archaeology, the researchers assembled a
collection of ancient remnants of bottle gourds from across the
Americas. They then identified key genetic markers from the DNA of both
the ancient gourds and their modern counterparts in Asia and Africa
before comparing the plants' genetic make-up to determine the origins of
the New World gourds.
"For 150 years, the dominant theory has been that bottle gourds,
which are quite buoyant and have no known wild progenitors in the
Americas, floated across the Atlantic Ocean from Africa and were picked
up and used as containers by people here," says Noreen Tuross, the
Landon T. Clay Professor of Scientific Archaeology in Harvard's Faculty
of Arts and Sciences. "Much to our surprise, we found that in every
case the gourds found in the Americas were a genetic match with modern
gourds found in Asia, not Africa. This suggests quite strongly that the
gourds that were used as containers in the Americas for thousands of
years before the advent of pottery were brought over from Asia."
The researchers say it's possible the domesticated gourds --
differentiated from wild bottle gourds by a much thicker rind -- were
conveyed to North America by people who arrived from Asia in boats or
who walked across an ancient land bridge between the continents, or that
the gourds floated across the Bering Strait after being transported by
humans from their native Africa to far northeastern Asia.
"This finding paints a new picture of the founding of the
Americas," says co-author Bruce Smith of the Smithsonian
Institution. "These people did not arrive here empty-handed; they
brought a domesticated plant and dogs with them. They arrived with
important tools necessary to survive and thrive on a new continent,
including some knowledge of and experience with plant
domestication."
Thought to have originated in Africa, bottle gourds (Lagenaria
sicereria) have been grown worldwide for thousands of years. The gourds
have little food value but their strong, hard-shelled fruits were long
prized as containers, musical instruments and fishing floats. This
lightweight "container crop" would have been particularly
useful to human societies before the advent of pottery and settled
village life, and was apparently domesticated thousands of years before
any plant was domesticated for food purposes.
Radiocarbon dating indicates that bottle gourds were present in the
Americas by 10,000 years ago and widespread by 8,000 years ago. Some of
the specimens studied by the team were not only the oldest bottle gourds
ever found but also quite possibly the oldest plant DNA ever analyzed.
The newest of their archaeological samples, a specimen found in
Kentucky, was just 1,000 years old -- suggesting the gourds were used in
the New World as containers for at least 9,000 years.
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Tuross and Smith's co-authors on the PNAS paper are David L. Erickson
of the National Museum of Natural History, Andrew C. Clarke of Massey
University and Daniel H. Sandweiss of the University of Maine. Their
work was supported by the Smithsonian Institution and the National
Museum of Natural History and by Harvard's Department of Anthropology
and Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology.
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