Distinguishing human food from fodder in the archaeobotanical
record is a difficult task. These categories are culturally defined and,
therefore, not obvious from the plant species represented in archaeological
samples, while context, such as storage area or container is not necessarily
distinctive for each category. While grain can be consumed as either human food
or fodder, depending on the particular needs of a given society, chaff is less
suitable for human consumption and more appropriate for other uses, one of
which is fodder. Archaeobotanical assemblages from two Late Neolithic sites in
northern Greece (Makriyalos and Makri) are dominated by glume-wheat chaff,
often in association with fig seeds. This material may well represent the
remains of dung, but it was not known if the cereal component was eaten by
livestock or mixed with the dung to form dung cakes. Our contribution presents
the results of an experiment involving the feeding of einkorn grain and chaff
(whole and pounded spikelets) and figs to goats to investigate the effect of
livestock digestion on plant material. The implications of this work for the
interpretation of archaeobotanical assemblages that may derive from animal dung
are considered using the Greek Neolithic assemblages.