At three separate sites scattered across the continent — in Italy, Russia, and the Czech Republic — researchers found the same thing on ancient stone tools: traces of starch that tell a quiet but remarkable story about what people ate 30,000 years ago. The evidence suggests that grinding plant roots into flour, and likely cooking the result into flatbread or simple cakes, was not an isolated experiment. It was a widespread practice.
What the evidence shows
- Prehistoric flatbread: Starch grains recovered from grinding stones at three European sites suggest Paleolithic peoples processed plant material into flour at least 30,000 B.C.E. — far earlier than previously documented.
- Grinding stone residue: Researchers analyzed wear patterns and microscopic residue on the tools, finding grains consistent with cattails and ferns — starchy plants that would have offered a meaningful carbohydrate source.
- Multi-step food processing: Producing usable flour required peeling, drying, and grinding — a sequence of deliberate steps indicating that Paleolithic Europeans understood food preparation well beyond simple meat consumption.
A more complex diet than the myth suggests
The popular image of the Paleolithic diet — almost entirely meat, hunted and eaten raw or roasted — has been a persistent one. It has shaped modern dietary fads and cultural assumptions alike. But this research, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, complicates that picture considerably.
Cattails and ferns were the dominant plant sources identified in the starch grains. Both are found across wide stretches of Europe and Asia, and both are rich in carbohydrates. Cattail roots in particular are exceptionally starchy — dried and ground, they yield a usable flour. Researchers noted that the range of grain sizes and morphologies at two of the three sites suggests the tools were used for more than one plant species, and possibly for other purposes beyond food processing.
This wasn’t opportunistic nibbling. It was systematic. The flour would have needed cooking to be fully digestible and nutritionally useful, which means these communities understood — and practiced — a multi-stage process: harvest, peel, dry, grind, cook. That sequence implies planning, knowledge transmission, and a practical relationship with plant life that the “hunter” framing routinely erases.
Three sites, one pattern
The geographic spread of the findings is one of the most significant aspects of the study. Italy, Russia, and the Czech Republic represent very different environments and populations — yet the same basic practice appears at all three. That convergence points away from a single local invention and toward something more culturally embedded: a technique that either spread across communities or developed independently in multiple places because the plants, the tools, and the need were all present.
The research was funded by Italy’s Istituto Italiano di Preistoria e Protostoria and received support from the Soprintendenza per i Beni Archeologici della Toscana. Researchers used microscopic analysis of tool surfaces alongside experimental reconstruction — physically replicating how the tools would have worked — to build their interpretation of the residue evidence.
Similar findings have since emerged from other parts of the world, including a 14,000-year-old flatbread discovered in Jordan, suggesting that plant processing and bread-making appeared independently across human cultures long before settled agriculture. The European evidence at 30,000 B.C.E. is among the earliest yet found.
Lasting impact
This discovery matters far beyond the archaeology of what ancient Europeans ate for dinner. It reframes the entire story of human cognition and culture in the Paleolithic period. Planning a multi-step food process requires memory, coordination, and the ability to communicate technique — the very capacities that underpin language, culture, and eventually civilization.
It also pushes back the timeline of carbohydrate-based nutrition significantly. Some researchers have argued that cooking starchy foods may have played a role in human brain development itself, providing the dense caloric fuel that a large brain demands. If flour processing was widespread 30,000 years ago, the relationship between plant foods and human evolution may be deeper than the popular narrative has allowed.
And there is something quietly profound in imagining the hands at those grinding stones — people working systematically, patiently, turning roots into something edible and nourishing. That gesture, repeated across thousands of years and thousands of miles, connects directly to every flatbread made today, from injera in Ethiopia to roti in South Asia to tortillas in Mexico. The impulse was the same. The technique, in its essentials, was the same.
Researchers also noted that communities across Africa and Asia have long used similar grinding methods for plant processing, suggesting that the knowledge base for flour production may have deep, pan-human roots. Archaeological evidence from sites in Africa indicates plant processing well before the European examples, pointing to a picture of shared human ingenuity rather than a single European origin point.
Blindspots and limits
The study’s findings are inferential — starch grains on grinding stones are consistent with flour production and flatbread, but they don’t confirm it directly. No charred bread survives from 30,000 B.C.E., and the researchers themselves used careful language: “suggest” and “possibly.” The gap between ground flour and baked flatbread remains a step the physical evidence cannot fully close.
The three sites studied are also European, which shapes what the research can claim. Plant processing traditions in Africa and Asia — some of which predate the European evidence — are less represented in this particular study, and the framing of “prehistoric Europe” as a site of dietary complexity can inadvertently obscure the broader, global nature of early human ingenuity.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Phys.org — Prehistoric humans ate flatbread 30,000 years ago
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Global suicide rate has fallen by 40% since 1995
- Renewables now make up at least 49% of global power capacity
- The Good News for Humankind archive on prehistory
About this article
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