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Scientists Crack the Code of Ancient Crop Pollen in India’s Ganga Plain
Scientists Crack the Code of Ancient Crop Pollen in India’s Ganga Plain
For the first time, Indian scientists have developed a reliable way to tell apart pollen from cultivated crops like wheat and rice from that of wild grasses. This breakthrough opens a powerful window into how farming began in India’s fertile Ganga Plain and how human societies shaped the landscape over thousands of years. Why Pollen Matters Pollen grains, preserved in soil and sediments, act like tiny time capsules. They can reveal what plants grew in a region, how forests changed, and when farming took root. But until now, distinguishing cereal crop pollen from wild grass pollen under a microscope was nearly impossible — they looked almost identical. The Breakthrough Researchers from the Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeosciences (BSIP), along with collaborators across India, studied 22 species of cereal and non‐cereal grasses. Using advanced imaging techniques — including light microscopy, confocal laser scanning, and electron microscopy — they established clear biometric thresholds: Cereal pollen: Grain size above 46 μm and annulus (ring) diameter above 9 μm Wild grass pollen: Smaller than these values Exception: Pearl millet, which has smaller pollen despite being cultivated Pollen micro-morphology of Non-cereal pollen Pollen micro-morphology of Cereal pollen This “paired biometric threshold” is the first India‐specific reference framework, replacing reliance on European pollen databases. Why the Ganga Plain? The Central Ganga Plain is India’s food basket, rich in croplands and agricultural diversity. By focusing here, scientists created a region‐specific tool that can accurately reconstruct past farming practices, human settlement, and environmental change. What It Means Archaeologists can now trace when and how farming began in India with greater precision. Environmental historians can better understand how humans transformed forests into fields. The study provides India with its first indigenous scientific tool to decode its agricultural past. The Team Behind It The study, published in The Holocene journal, was led by Dr. Swati Tripathi (BSIP, Lucknow) with collaborators from the Botanical Survey of India, Indian Institute of Geomagnetism, and Lucknow University. Dr. Arti Garg (Botanical Survey of India, Prayagraj); Arya Pandey and Anupam Sharma (BSIP); Priyanka Singh (Indian Institute of Geomagnetism, Mumbai); and Anshika Singh (Lucknow University). The Big Picture India is the world’s second‐largest producer of wheat and rice. This discovery doesn’t just refine scientific methods — it helps tell the story of how the fertile plains of the Ganga became one of the world’s great agricultural hubs, shaped by human hands over millennia. This is the first time such an analogue has been developed using indigenous data from the Ganga Plain, enabling scientists to reconstruct the region’s agricultural past based on local evidence rather than relying on European pollen reference databases. First Published at www.IndianWeb2.com