|                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                               Surprising source sheds light on ancient trade across Israel's Negev desertThe findings reflect the  beginnings of globalization processes in the ancient world," said Prof.  Bar-Oz from the University of Haifa. By TPS Spices were not the only commodity traded over the ancient "Incense  Route" that linked the Arabian Peninsula and the Red Sea to the  Mediterranean Sea and ran through the Land of Israel. Archaeological research at the University of Haifa has recently focused on the commodities in transit. It has targeted "rubbish middens" – old dumps for domestic waste that  contained animal bones, human excrement, botanical material, mollusk  shells, potsherds, and other artifacts and environmental and cultural  indicators intentionally or unintentionally modified by human activities  connected with past human occupation. Red Sea fish, Nile oysters and exquisite bowls from Petra, the  capital of the Nabataeans located today in Jordan, were part of the  ancient Incense Road trade, according to the new archaeological study. The new study was conducted by Prof. Guy Bar-Oz, Ph.D. student Roy  Galili from Ben Gurion University, Prof. Gideon Avni, Dr. Tali  Erickson-Gini, and Dr. Yotam Tepper from the Israel Antiquities  Authority, Dr. Daniel Fox from Cambridge University and research student  Nofar Shamir of the University of Haifa. "When examining the composition of trade, three main trends can be  identified – intercontinental trade with a central axis to Southeast  Asia; international trade that connected marine sources and especially  between the Red Sea and the Mediterranean; and local trade, which formed  the 'economic belt' of the road and supplied the raw materials, as well  as food for travelers on the road," explained Prof. Bar-Oz from the  School of Archaeology and Marine Cultures at the University of Haifa,  who heads the research group digging in the ancient garbage that has  accumulated at various stops along the way. Uncovering spicesThe Incense Route, which flourished between the third century BCE and  the second century CE, with activity peaking during the Nabataean and  Roman periods, was famous mainly for the spices and perfumes transported  through it from Southeast Asia, through the Arabian deserts to the  Mediterranean ports. A main artery of the road passed through the Land  of Israel from Petra via the Ramon Crater and the Negev Hills to the port in Gaza. Historical evidence documents the demand for luxury products brought  from the East that included frankincense and myrrh and various spices,  including cinnamon, black pepper, vanilla, cumin, turmeric and ginger. In recent years, remains of these materials have been discovered at archaeological sites, including those in Israel. Chemical analysis of jars at Tel Dor, located on Israel's  Mediterranean coast next to Haifa, revealed remnants of cinnamon.  Similarly in Jerusalem, jars contained remnants of vanilla. More  recently, turmeric was discovered in the teeth of a man buried in  Megiddo in the Jezreel Valley in northern Israel. The researchers in the current study focused on locating the raw materials that passed along the route. For that, they dug up piles of garbage that had accumulated in the  three main stations in the Negev – at Othan Mor (Moa) stopover, Sha'ar  Ramon (Khan Saharonim), which served as hostels for the merchants'  caravans, and on the side of caverns that served as guard posts to  protect the road. Crossroads of East and West"Inside the rubbish dumps, we hoped to find the food scraps and  utensils used to prepare the food. Among other things, we wanted to use  the variety of raw materials discovered to determine in which direction  the trading caravans traveled. Did the merchant convoys carry goods only  from east to west or did trade flourish in the opposite direction and  the caravans returned laden on the way back as well? These are questions  about which we had very little knowledge," said Prof. Bar-Oz. The researchers found fish bones and several types of seafood,  including remnants of edible oysters from the Nile, and several  remnants, some from the Mediterranean and the Red Sea. Claws of freshwater crabs were also  discovered in the garbage, as well as a variety of seeds of fruits,  grains and legumes. A large number of olive and date seeds reflect the  importance of agricultural products in the economy. The archaeologists also found fragments of luxury Nabataean pottery and glass. They discovered evidence of a local economy that supported the  trading caravans. Bones from sheep, pigs, and game meat, chicken  eggshells and plenty of plant foods were found in the excavations  themselves. According to Bar-Oz, these are probably the evidence of food that awaited the people in the convoy in those khans in the desert. "The findings reflect the beginnings of globalization processes in  the ancient world and the special importance of the Middle East and the  desert expanses in particular, at the crossroads of East and West," the  researchers concluded. |