"Someone brought them there intentionally – took the knowledge and the plant itself to a place that is outside its natural habitat," said Dafna Langgut of the Department of Archaeology & Ancient Near Eastern Cultures at Tel Aviv University.
According to researchers from Tel Aviv University and the Hebrew University, charcoal remnants of olive trees found at the Chalcolithic Tel Zaf site in the Jordan Valley indicate that the trees were planted intentionally. This is because the olive does not naturally grow in the Jordan Valley, researchers said.
"In archaeobotany, this is considered indisputable proof of domestication, which means that we have here the earliest evidence of the olive's domestication anywhere in the world," said Langgut, who headed the study.
The findings were published in May in the journal Scientific Reports.
"Trees, even when burned down to charcoal, can be identified by their anatomic structure," said Langgut. "That's why identifying tree remnants found at archaeological sites, such as charcoal from hearths, is a key to understanding what kinds of trees grew in the natural environment at the time, and when humans began to cultivate fruit trees," she said.
https://www.israelhayom.com/2022/06/17/israeli-researchers-find-indisputable-proof-of-oldest-ever-fruit-tree-domestication/