Grape-pressings from northern Greece: The earliest wine in the Aegean?

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Abstract

Houses burnt down at the Neolithic site of Dikili Tash in northern Greece preserved the remains of wild grapes and figs. The charred shapes showed that there was a pile of grape pips with skins - clear evidence for the extraction of juice. The authors argue that the juice was probably used to make wine - towards the end of the fifth millennium BC the earliest so far from the Aegean. The occupants of the houses also had two-handled cups, providing another clue to consumption of a special kind.

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Valamoti, S. M., Mangafa, M., Koukouli-Chrysanthaki, C., & Malamidou, D. (2007). Grape-pressings from northern Greece: The earliest wine in the Aegean? Antiquity, 81(311), 54–61. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003598X00094837

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