The oldest Italian wine in the world is found

Researchers have found evidence of the oldest Italian wine in the world in Bronze Age containers, suggesting that wine production may begin in the early 4th century BC.

  1. Unearth a 2,100-year-old marble statue in Northern Turkey
  2. Italian archeology finds the oldest set of dentures in the world

Researchers have found evidence of the oldest Italian wine in the world in Bronze Age containers, suggesting that wine production may begin in the early 4th century BC.

This discovery has just been published in detail in the Journal of Chemistry.

Before that, it was believed that wine production had developed in Italy in the Middle Ages (from 1300-1100 BC).

Picture 1 of The oldest Italian wine in the world is found

According to chemical analysis carried out on the neck, it was a wine container.

Leading researcher of the archaeological group Davide Tanasi from the University of South Florida in Tampa, USA conducted chemical analysis of residues on ceramic pots found at the Copper Age site of Monte Kronio in Agrigento, located on the coast. southwest of Sicily.

The team determined that residues containing tartaric acid and sodium salt of alcohol, this natural amount occurs in grape bark when conducting wine production.

Now researchers are trying to determine whether the alcohol in the neck is red or white.

Update 24 May 2019
Category

System

Mac OS X

Hardware

Game

Tech info

Technology

Science

Life

Application

Electric

Program

Mobile