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Wine making, Beer making
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Wine making, Beer making, Coquitlam, Burnaby
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Wine making, Beer making
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Como Creek Brewing News Articles
Award Winning Wine, Beer, Coolers and Cider
Earliest Known Winery found in Armenia
WASHINGTON — The earliest known winery
has been uncovered in a cave in the mountains of Armenia.
A vat to press the grapes, fermentation jars and even a cup
and drinking bowl dating to about 6,000 years ago were discovered in the cave
complex by an international team of researchers.
While older evidence of wine drinking has been found, this is
the earliest example of complete wine production, according to Gregory Areshian
of the University of California, Los Angeles, co-director of the excavation.
The findings, announced Tuesday by the National Geographic
Society, are published in the online edition of the Journal of Archaeological
Science.
"The evidence argues convincingly for a wine-making
facility," said Patrick McGovern, scientific director of the Biomolecular
Archaeology Laboratory at the University of Pennsylvania Museum in Philadelphia,
who was not part of the research team.
Such large-scale wine production implies that the Eurasian
grape had already been domesticated, said McGovern, author of "Uncorking the
Past: The Quest for Wine, Beer and Other Alcoholic Beverages."
The same Armenian area was the site of the discovery of the
oldest known leather shoe, dated to about 5,500 years ago. That discovery at the
area known as Areni-1 was reported last summer.
According to the archeologists, inside the cave was a shallow
basin about 3 feet across that was positioned to drain into a deep vat.
The basin could have served as a wine press where people
stomped the grapes with their feet, a method Areshian noted was traditional for
centuries.
They also found grape seeds, remains of pressed grapes and
dozens of dried vines. The seeds were from the same type of grapes -- Vitis
vinifera vinifera -- still used to make wine.
The earliest comparable remains were found in the tomb of the
ancient Egyptian king Scorpion I, dating to around 5,100 years ago.
Because the wine-making facility was found surrounded by
graves, the researchers suggest the wine may have been intended for ceremonial
use.
That made sense to McGovern, who noted that wine was the main
beverage at funeral feasts and was later used for tomb offerings.
Indeed, he said, "Even in lowland regions like ancient Egypt
where beer reigned supreme, special wines from the Nile Delta were required as
funerary offerings and huge quantities of wine were consumed at major royal and
religious festivals."
McGovern noted that similar vats for treading on grapes and
jars for storage have been found around the Mediterranean area.
In his books, McGovern has suggested that a "wine culture,"
including the domestication of the Eurasian grape, was first consolidated in the
mountainous regions around Armenia before moving to the south.
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