A team of archeologists working in Jordan has made a discovery that represents a
new chapter in the story of our ancestors' move from foraging to farming. The
researchers unearthed an ancient granary. The round, mud hut dates back more
than 11,000 years. A raised floor was key for keeping grain dry and out of reach
of hungry rats. But what makes the find so special is that the granary was built
a thousand years before people ate domesticated crops. The report appears in the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The researchers found caches of wild barley and oats inside the structure. Such
evidence of a dedicated food-storage edifice has never been recorded from the
pre-pottery Neolithic age. The investigators say this selective cultivation and
management of wild plants shows behaviors that led to agriculture.