The Beer Archaeologist
By analyzing ancient pottery, Patrick McGovern is resurrecting the libations that fueled civilization
- By Abigail Tucker
- Photographs by Landon Nordeman
- Smithsonian magazine, July-August 2011, Subscribe
(Page 5 of 7)
Many of McGovern’s most startling finds stem from other archaeologists’ spadework; he brings a fresh perspective to forgotten digs, and his “excavations” are sometimes no more taxing than walking up or down a flight of stairs in his own museum to retrieve a sherd or two. Residues extracted from the drinking set of King Midas—who ruled over Phrygia, an ancient district of Turkey—had languished in storage for 40 years before McGovern found them and went to work. The artifacts contained more than four pounds of organic materials, a treasure—to a biomolecular archaeologist—far more precious than the king’s fabled gold. But he’s also adamant about travel and has done research on every continent except Australia (though he has lately been intrigued by Aborigine concoctions) and Antarctica (where there are no sources of fermentable sugar, anyway). McGovern is intrigued by traditional African honey beverages in Ethiopia and Uganda, which might illuminate humanity’s first efforts to imbibe, and Peruvian spirits brewed from such diverse sources as quinoa, peanuts and pepper-tree berries. He has downed drinks of all descriptions, including Chinese baijiu, a distilled alcohol that tastes like bananas (but contains no banana) and is approximately 120 proof, and the freshly masticated Peruvian chicha, which he is too polite to admit he despises. (“It’s better when they flavor it with wild strawberries,” he says firmly.)
Partaking is important, he says, because drinking in modern societies offers insight into dead ones.
“I don’t know if fermented beverages explain everything, but they help explain a lot about how cultures have developed,” he says. “You could say that kind of single-mindedness can lead you to over-interpret, but it also helps you make sense of a universal phenomenon.”
McGovern, in fact, believes that booze helped make us human. Yes, plenty of other creatures get drunk. Bingeing on fermented fruits, inebriated elephants go on trampling sprees and wasted birds plummet from their perches. Unlike distillation, which human beings actually invented (in China, around the first century A.D., McGovern suspects), fermentation is a natural process that occurs serendipitously: yeast cells consume sugar and create alcohol. Ripe figs laced with yeast drop from trees and ferment; honey sitting in a tree hollow packs quite a punch if mixed with the right proportion of rainwater and yeast and allowed to stand. Almost certainly, humanity’s first nip was a stumbled-upon, short-lived elixir of this sort, which McGovern likes to call a “Stone Age Beaujolais nouveau.”
But at some point the hunter-gatherers learned to maintain the buzz, a major breakthrough. “By the time we became distinctly human 100,000 years ago, we would have known where there were certain fruits we could collect to make fermented beverages,” McGovern says. “We would have been very deliberate about going at the right time of the year to collect grains, fruits and tubers and making them into beverages at the beginning of the human race.” (Alas, archaeologists are unlikely to find evidence of these preliminary hooches, fermented from things such as figs or baobab fruit, because their creators, in Africa, would have stored them in dried gourds and other containers that did not stand the test of time.)
With a supply of mind-blowing beverages on hand, human civilization was off and running. In what might be called the “beer before bread” hypothesis, the desire for drink may have prompted the domestication of key crops, which led to permanent human settlements. Scientists, for instance, have measured atomic variations within the skeletal remains of New World humans; the technique, known as isotope analysis, allows researchers to determine the diets of the long-deceased. When early Americans first tamed maize around 6000 B.C., they were probably drinking the corn in the form of wine rather than eating it, analysis has shown.
Maybe even more important than their impact on early agriculture and settlement patterns, though, is how prehistoric potions “opened our minds to other possibilities” and helped foster new symbolic ways of thinking that helped make humankind unique, McGovern says. “Fermented beverages are at the center of religions all around the world. [Alcohol] makes us who we are in a lot of ways.” He contends that the altered state of mind that comes with intoxication could have helped fuel cave drawings, shamanistic medicine, dance rituals and other advancements.
When McGovern traveled to China and discovered the oldest known alcohol—a heady blend of wild grapes, hawthorn, rice and honey that is now the basis for Dogfish Head’s Chateau Jiahu—he was touched but not entirely surprised to learn of another “first” unearthed at Jiahu, an ancient Yellow River Valley settlement: delicate flutes, made from the bones of the red-crowned crane, that are the world’s earliest-known, still playable musical instruments.
Alcohol may be at the heart of human life, but the bulk of McGovern’s most significant samples come from tombs. Many bygone cultures seem to have viewed death as a last call of sorts, and mourners provisioned the dead with beverages and receptacles—agate drinking horns, straws of lapis lazuli and, in the case of a Celtic woman buried in Burgundy around the sixth century B.C., a 1,200-liter caldron—so they could continue to drink their fill in eternity. King Scorpion I’s tomb was flush with once-full wine jars. Later Egyptians simply diagramed beer recipes on the walls so the pharaoh’s servants in the afterlife could brew more (presumably freeing up existing beverages for the living).
Some of the departed had festive plans for the afterlife. In 1957, when University of Pennsylvania archaeologists first tunneled into the nearly airtight tomb of King Midas, encased in an earthen mound near Ankara, Turkey, they discovered the body of a 60- to 65-year-old man fabulously arrayed on a bed of purple and blue cloth beside the largest cache of Iron Age drinking paraphernalia ever found: 157 bronze buckets, vats and bowls. And as soon as the archaeologists let fresh air into the vault, the tapestries’ vivid colors began fading before their eyes.
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Comments (26)
technical assistance as in terms of a factory which can turn pineapples into wine and beer .region central region districts masaka,mukono,kayunga.as there are plenty of pinneapples.
Posted by musoke moses on January 19,2013 | 11:23 AM
Interesting. We know more about Sumerian beer than we do about Merovingian (early French) beer, mainly because of the lack of substantial artifacts. Yet beer (which might conceivably have made its way from Babylon to the Germanic groups, if one accepts that Germanic numeric terms reflect knowledge of Babylonian numerals) was the main northern drink for a very long time. I'm bemused that Massilia is not mentioned in regard to French wine; the Greeks are often credited (by anecdote and archaeology) with introducing wine in France. And the fact that Etruscan wine was imported of course does not mean the Gauls were not already making their own wine; they kept importing wines long after their own wine-making is well documented. The Etruscans, on the other hand, may have invented the barrel, which is more often credited to the Gauls.
Posted by Jim Chevallier on October 2,2012 | 10:28 PM
Wow! !! An 18000bp egyptian beer receipe.....talk about medical brilliance!!!!
Posted by medicalarch on November 10,2011 | 10:50 AM
Very interesting article. Never new that hemp was a hallucinogen. Many brewers use hemp as a flavoring much like hops. I think the author may be mistaking hemp for cannabis. But cannabis is still not a hallucinogenic. I could be mistaken but I've never heard of anyone "tripping out on it".
Posted by Lisa W on September 23,2011 | 07:59 PM
Living in Portland "Beervana" Oregon, I found Abigail Tucker's "Dig, Drink and Be Merry" article quite interesting from home brewer's point of view. Many of the ingredients that Dr. Pat has analyzed are still used by today's craft brewers, and there's movement underway to rediscover the ancient brews. Intrigued by his association with Dogfish Head brewery, I bought a couple of bottles of Midas Touch for sampling. King Midas and his early counterparts must of had a sweet tooth, for I found it was too sweet for my pallet, but never the less it was exciting to experience a brew from a 700 B.C. recipe. Cheers to civilization!
Posted by Curtis on August 3,2011 | 01:44 PM
Tried Midas Touch last night with a crew of fellow archaeologists from Wayne State University, celebrating the conclusion of a successful field school. Cellar temp (no fridges in Phrygia, mind), served in shallow bowls (per the original vessels). Consensus: excellent brew, very complex--everyone tasted something different. On to Theobroma!
Posted by Dan Harrison on July 24,2011 | 10:47 AM
I found this topic fascinating, and the author obviously did a lot of in-depth research to write the article. However, the conspicuous mention of Dogfish Head Pub over and over bothered me a bit; it made what would otherwise be an informative article seem almost like an infomercial.
Posted by EveT on July 20,2011 | 02:19 PM
As an archaeologist, a student of historical and ancient foodways, and a long-time homebrewer and winemaker, i thoroughly enjoyed this well-constructed story about Professor McGovern's work. I have also enjoyed the fruits of his collaboration with Sam Calagione that have made it to market.
Beside the abiding public interest in things archaeological and things alcoholic, this is important work for increasing understanding of our own humanity. This sort of research and experimentation gives us not only a literal taste of history, but a more perfect understanding of ourselves.
Posted by L. Daniel Mouer, PhD on July 17,2011 | 09:34 AM
One of the most fascinating and entertaining articles I've read in Smithsonian to date. Thanks!
Posted by Stephen on July 16,2011 | 02:09 AM
What a witty, scholarly, intriguing read. Best article I've read on any subject for a long long time! Is professor McGovern related to George who also hailed from Mitchell, South Dakota?
Posted by marlowe anderson on July 16,2011 | 01:55 PM
"...opioids are technically classified as a depressant but can elicit hallucinatory effects."
In my decades of working with abusers: never.
Posted by Diz Pareunia on July 12,2011 | 05:05 PM
Thats a great story. The wines sure is a everybody's choice right from the dogfish time.
Posted by Mathew Leonard on July 11,2011 | 09:05 AM
What if any alcoholic beverages did the American Indians make & drink before European Alcoholic Beverages were introduced to them?
Posted by J. L. G. on July 8,2011 | 06:20 PM
beer, wine, alcohol is of course one of our best foods and far too often villified. I just read of a 700 lb woman working to 'set the record' by attaining 1,000 pounds. She is not alone in abusing food. It is time for the fringe elements (MADD) to stop vilifying the responsible consumption of food/beverage.
Posted by Joepalooka on July 8,2011 | 03:16 PM
I've heard that with old corn seeds from SouthWest Native American Indian pueblos that they were able to spray them with a plant hormone of some sort and get some of them to grow. If it's possible to do that with the old grape seeds, I think they should try that before doing DNA extraction. You could do the extraction from the new plant cells in the plant if it worked...
Posted by Keith Wellman on July 8,2011 | 12:16 PM
I was so happy to read about this article on the Beer Archaeologist in Smithsonian...I am a very avid beer enthusiast and I am looking forward to this new Dogfish Head release of their Ta Henket beer. I always wanted to try a beer based on the type that was brewed in ancient Egypt. The only other company that I know of that released a similar type of brew like this one was Sapporo, but that was a limited release and I don't think that it was available for commercial purchase. I also will have to find Dogfish's Midas Touch...I'd like to try that one!
Posted by George L. on July 3,2011 | 07:23 PM
The author wrote a very interesting article, and all anybody can do with their comments is nit-pick? C'mon. It's really too bad that the place you let the article take you is there. It was wasted on you.
Posted by Pleased and Grateful on July 1,2011 | 02:03 PM
My apologies. Too much beer. Try hieroglyphs instead of hieroglyphics. the ic ending is an adjective. I am a stickler for grammar, but I'm dyslexic and spell phonetically to an extreme fault.
Posted by Randall P. on June 30,2011 | 02:32 PM
Try hyroglyphs instead of hyroglyphics. Serious pet peeve.
Posted by Randall P. on June 30,2011 | 02:26 PM
nit-nit:
Any marijuana plant product that acts on the cannabinoid receptor(s) is technically a hallucinogen, and opioids are technically classified as a depressant but can elicit hallucinatory effects.
-Sean
Posted by Sean Sparks on June 28,2011 | 05:34 PM
I really enjoyed this piece -- I'm a big fan of both Abigail Tucker's graceful writing, and Dogfish Head's delicious beer!
Posted by Amanda on June 28,2011 | 09:59 AM
Is that a mistake in the first sentence? A recipe dating back several hundred centuries?
Posted by jvk222 on June 26,2011 | 08:58 AM
The very first sentence contains a howler, referring to "an Egyptian ale whose recipe dates back several hundred centuries."
Several dozen centuries would be more like it. Even a single hundred centuries would be 10,000 years, about the age of the oldest known alcoholic beverage.
Posted by DWPittelli on June 25,2011 | 09:09 AM
I love the comment "“My wife says I tend to age things too long.” . What better thought could anyone have about a libation. Just wonderful.
Posted by charles s on June 24,2011 | 11:41 PM
a nit:
neither hemp nor opium is properly a hallucinogen
Posted by joel hanes on June 24,2011 | 08:14 PM