Salt of the earth discovery sheds new light on culinary hist

Salt of the earth discovery sheds new light on culinary history


NOT ironstone mining, steel-making, ship-building or chemical creation; the oldest known industry on Teesside is now salt-making.
A spectacular discovery from around 3,800BC of the oldest salt-making site in western Europe has been reported in a prestigious academic journal by Dr Steve Sherlock, as the D&S Times told last week.
It could change the way history looks at the way hunter-gatherers gave up their nomadic way of life about 6,000 years ago and settled down to become farmers; it could even change the way Teesside is perceived – previously its only known contribution to culinary history was the parmo, but now the very first Stone Age fine diners, the first gastronomes, could have been tucking into salt-flavoured beef dishes on the clifftops of North Yorkshire.

Related Keywords

North Yorkshire , United Kingdom , France , Kirkleatham , Redcar And Cleveland , Skinningrove , Stuart Boulton , Kirkleatham Museum , , Stone Age , Street House , Redcar Beach , Century Saxon , Anglo Saxon , வடக்கு யார்க்ஷயர் , ஒன்றுபட்டது கிஂக்டம் , பிரான்ஸ் , ரெட்‌கார் மற்றும் கிளீவ்லேண்ட் , ஸ்டூவர்ட் போல்டன் , ஸ்டோந் வாழ்நாள் , தெரு வீடு , ரெட்‌கார் கடற்கரை , சிஇஎன்டியுவ்ஆர்ஒய் சாக்சன் , ஆங்கிலோ சாக்சன் ,

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