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Ancient pottery reveals the first evidence for honey hunting in prehistoric West Africa


Credit: Goethe University
A team of scientists, led by the University of Bristol, with colleagues from Goethe University, Frankfurt, has found the first evidence for ancient honey hunting, locked inside pottery fragments from prehistoric West Africa, dating back some 3,500 years ago.
Honeybees are an iconic species, being the world s most important pollinator of food crops. Honeybee hive products, including beeswax, honey and pollen, used both for food and medicinal purposes, support livelihoods and provide sources of income for local communities across much of Africa, through both beekeeping and wild harvest.
Today, honey is collected from wild bee nests in many African countries. In the West African tropical rain forest, hunting for wild honey, found in natural hollows in tree trunks and on the underside of thick branches, is a common subsistence activity. ....

Democratic Republic Of The General , Democratic Republic Of The Congo , Muslim Berber , Katharina Neumann , Ibn Battuta , Julie Dunne , Peter Breunig , Nature Communications , Goethe University , University Of Bristol School Chemistry , University Of Bristol , West Africa , West African , Central Nigerian Nok , Ituri Forest , Eastern Zaire , Early Neolithic , Minoan Crete , West Cotton , Organic Geochemistry Unit , ஜனநாயக குடியரசு ஆஃப் தி ஜநரல் , ஜனநாயக குடியரசு ஆஃப் தி காங்கோ , முஸ்லீம் பர்‌பர் , இப்ந் பட்டா , ஜூலி டன்னே , இயற்கை தகவல்தொடர்புகள் ,

University of Bristol: Ancient pottery reveals the first evidence for honey hunting in prehistoric West Africa


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A team of scientists, led by the University of Bristol, with colleagues from Goethe University, Frankfurt, has found the first evidence for ancient honey hunting, locked inside pottery fragments from prehistoric West Africa, dating back some 3,500 years ago.
Honeybees are an iconic species, being the world’s most important pollinator of food crops. Honeybee hive products, including beeswax, honey and pollen, used both for food and medicinal purposes, support livelihoods and provide sources of income for local communities across much of Africa, through both beekeeping and wild harvest.
Today, honey is collected from wild bee nests in many African countries. In the West African tropical rain forest, hunting for wild honey, found in natural hollows in tree trunks and on the underside of thick branches, is a common subsistence activity. ....

Democratic Republic Of The General , Democratic Republic Of The Congo , Muslim Berber , Katharina Neumann , Ibn Battuta , Julie Dunne , Peter Breunig , Nature Communications , Goethe University , University Of Bristol School Chemistry , University Of Bristol , West Africa , West African , Central Nigerian Nok , Ituri Forest , Eastern Zaire , Early Neolithic , Minoan Crete , West Cotton , Organic Geochemistry Unit , ஜனநாயக குடியரசு ஆஃப் தி ஜநரல் , ஜனநாயக குடியரசு ஆஃப் தி காங்கோ , முஸ்லீம் பர்‌பர் , இப்ந் பட்டா , ஜூலி டன்னே , இயற்கை தகவல்தொடர்புகள் ,