High times in ancient China revealed in
funerary cannabis discovery
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[June 13, 2019]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Marijuana chemical
residue has been found in incense burners apparently used during
funerary rites at a mountainous site in western China in about 500 BC,
providing what may be the oldest evidence of smoking cannabis for its
mind-altering properties.
The evidence was found on 10 wooden braziers containing stones with burn
marks that were discovered in eight tombs at the Jirzankal Cemetery site
in the Pamir Mountains in China's Xinjiang region, scientists said on
Wednesday. The tombs also bore human skeletons and artifacts including a
type of angular harp used in ancient funerals and sacrificial
ceremonies.
The researchers used a method called gas chromatography-mass
spectrometry to identify organic material preserved in the braziers,
detecting marijuana's chemical signature. They found a higher level of
THC, the plant's main psychoactive constituent, than the low levels
typically seen in wild cannabis plants, indicating it was chosen for its
mind-altering qualities.
"We can start to piece together an image of funerary rites that included
flames, rhythmic music and hallucinogen smoke, all intended to guide
people into an altered state of mind," the researchers wrote in the
study published in the journal Science Advances, perhaps to try to
communicate with the divine or the dead.
Yimin Yang, an archaeological scientist at the University of Chinese
Academy of Sciences and the study's leader, called the findings the
earliest unambiguous evidence of marijuana use for its psychoactive
properties.
"We believe that the plants were burned to induce some level of
psychoactive effect, although these plants would not have been as potent
as many modern cultivated varieties," added Robert Spengler, director of
the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History's
Paleoethnobotanical Laboratories in Germany.
'LONG, INTIMATE HISTORY'
"I think it should come as no surprise that humans have had a long,
intimate history with cannabis, as they have had with all of the plants
that eventually became domesticated," Spengler added.
The elevated THC levels raise the question of whether the people used
wild cannabis varieties with naturally high THC levels or plants bred to
be more potent. The marijuana was not smoked in the same way as today -
in pipes or rolled in cigarettes - but rather inhaled while burning in
the braziers.
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Wooden braziers and a skeleton found in the tomb M12 as they were
exposed in the excavations at an archaeological site in western
China that provided evidence for the burning of cannabis at a
cemetery locale roughly 2,500 years ago, is shown in this image from
the Pamir Mountains in Xinjiang region, released from Beijing,
China, on June 12, 2019. Courtesy Xinhua Wu/Handout via REUTERS
Cannabis, one of the most widely used psychoactive drugs in the
world today, was initially used in ancient East Asia as an oil seed
crop and in making hemp textiles and rope. The timing for the use of
a different cannabis subspecies as a drug has been a contentious
issue among scientists, but ancient texts and recent archeological
discoveries have shed light on the matter.
Herodotus, the ancient Greek historian, wrote in about 440 BC of
people, apparently in the Caspian region, inhaling marijuana smoke
in a tent as the plant was burned in a bowl with hot stones. The
Jirzankal Cemetery findings also fits with other ancient evidence
for cannabis use at burial sites in the Altai Mountains of Russia.
"This study is important for understanding the antiquity of drug
use," Spengler said, adding that evidence now points to a wide
geographic distribution of marijuana use in the ancient world.
The cemetery site is situated near the ancient Silk Road, indicating
that the old trade route linking China and the Middle East may have
facilitated the spread of marijuana use as a drug.
The cemetery, reaching across three terraces at a rocky and arid
site up to 10,105 feet (3,080 meters) above sea level, includes
black and white stone strips created on the landscape using pebbles,
marking the tomb surfaces, and circular mounds with rings of stones
underneath.
Some buried skulls were perforated and there were signs of fatal
cuts and breaks in several bones, suggestive of human sacrifice,
though this remains uncertain, the researchers said.
"We know very little about these people beyond what has been
recovered from this cemetery," Spengler said, though he noted that
some of the artifacts such as glass beads, metal items and ceramics
resemble those from further west in Central Asia, suggesting
cultural links.
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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