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Domestication
of the Chickpea required Summer Irrigation
and the Scientific Skills available at Kharsag
The press
report below features additional evidence to support for the fact
that the founder domesticated agricultural crops, now being located
in the same region and dated around the same time, all required
considerable skill and scientific knowledge in the production
of the first domesticated seeds. This is also the case in the
Domestication of the Fig.
Chickpeas
role in lifting the domesticates mood - Chickpeas were hard to
domesticate but had many benefits for early communities.
Norman Hammond Archaeology Correspondent
The Daily Telegraph 2nd July 2007
Chickpeas
have become a familiar part of our diet as Mediterranean and Middle
Eastern dishes have increased in popularity: hoummos is now a
supermarket staple, and Elizabeth David and her successors have
brought Spanish garbanzo stews and Italian ceci with pasta
to the dinner tables of Middle England.
Although Cicer
reticu/atum formed part of the "founder package"
of early crop domesticates in the Middle East about 11,000 years
ago, along with wheat, barley, peas, lentils and bitter vetch,
it was unique among them in not being wide-spread as a wild plant.
While the
others are found more or less from Anatolia to Aghanistan, wild
chickpeas are known only from a few locations in southeastern
Turkey, although this is the region in which, if anywhere, the
first farmers seem to have emerged.
Chickpeas
also keep their seeds in the pod, not shattering them like wild
peas and lentils, keeping stands of the plant small and localised.
As a winter crop it is subject to devastating fungal attacks of
Ascochyta blight, and in converting it to a summer crop to avoid
this, farmers risk the loss of up to 90 per cent of the yield
from water shortage.
In other words,
chickpeas are not an easy or obvious domesticate, and their inclusion
in the earliest crop package must have had some other reason.
Why "the
rare and agronomically problematic chickpea" was chosen,
including "the development of a novel agronomic practice,
summer cropping, which may involve a considerable loss of the
poten- tial yield", lay in its protein content, according
to a study by Zohar Kerem and colleagues in the Journal of
Archaeological Science. They suggest that experimental cultivation
by early farmers yielded a seed with a high level of the important
amino acid tryptophan.
"Dietary
tryptophan determines brain serotonin synthesis, which in turn
affects certain brain functions and human behaviour," the
investigators say, noting that its effects are perceived by both
animal and human consumers. Extraction of the amino acid by microwaving
and measurement by re- versed-phase chromatography showed that
chickpeas of both the larger Kabuli and the older and smaller
Desi cultivated types had more than three times the tryptophan
level of wild seeds.
Cultivation
yielded a seed with a high level of tryptophan
The nutritional
value of the cultivated seeds, measured using standard World Health
Organisation criteria, was double that of wild seeds for children,
and almost double for adults. "Our results suggest that consuming
domesticated chickpea will elevate the levels of tryptophan available
for processes other than growth and maintenance, for example bio-synthesis
of brain serotonin," the team says, noting that cooking did
not affect the amino acid level.
Selection
for a high-tryptophan crop such as chickpea "was dependent
upon prehistoric humans' ability to recognise naturally occurring
variability", meaning that the effects of eat ing even wild
seeds must have been empirically appreciated. Farm animals have
been seen to do just this and "diets enriched with tryptophan
were recently shown to induce accelerated growth", they say.
Tryptophan
is a precusor of serotonin in the brain: more of the former in
the diet leads to more of the latter in brain tissue, which in
turn may create a well-fed feeling of satiety and at the same
time increase ovulation rates in women. Serotonin is also implicated
in cognitive ability, so "trytophan availability may affect
cognitive performances related to social behaviour and emotional
processing, especially under stress. This implicates tryptophan
in lowering of aggression and decreased quarrelsomeness in healthy
human volunteers," the team reports.
Establishing
this must have been a process of trial and error after initial
observation of the wild seeds utility, and "the rarity of
wild Cicer reticulatum and the agronomic difficulties involved
in chickpea cropping call for an unorthodox explanation for the
motivation to retain chickpea as a crop plant. Cultivation
raised the value of the plant enormously as a food source, and
its association with higher ovulation rates, more frequent births
and better-fed infants would have benefited early communities.
The cognitive
benefits of serotonin would have led to more innovative cultural
activities and increased self-confidence, the authors surmise.
"The choice of chickpea should be looked upon as another
step in establishing a new human-environment relationship, in
which accumulation of knowledge through complex trial-and-error
processes ended up in the adoption of this staple plant."
This research
suggests that hoummos, with olive oil and sesame paste, as well
as chickpeas, seems to be a dish good for the body, the mind,
and one's sense of wellbeing.
Journal
of Archaeological Science 34: 1289-93
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