This article was originally authored by Dr. Hugh Ross and is republished here with permission from Reasons to Believe, a ministry dedicated to integrating science and faith. All rights reserved by the original publisher. To explore more resources, visit their website Reasons to Believe.
Genesis 4:2–4 records that the first humans cultivated crops and raised flocks. For decades, scientists described early humans as simple hunter-gatherers whose diet centered on meat and wild plants.
In 2015, new evidence began to reshape that view. Researchers found proof that ancient humans were baking bread and processing grains more than 30,000 years ago. Dr. Hugh Ross has written about discoveries showing that humans harvested, roasted, ground, and baked grains into bread-like foods long before recorded history.
Before 12,000 years ago, climate instability and low carbon dioxide made farming difficult. Because of this, early agricultural activity was small-scale and mixed, which explains why traces of advanced food production took so long to uncover.
A research team led by Ceren Kabukcu examined charred plant remains found in the Franchthi Cave in Greece and the Shanidar Cave in Iraqi Kurdistan. Their results, dating between 40,000 and 13,000 years ago, revealed early humans soaked, ground, boiled, and baked foods such as lentils, peas, pistachios, and mustards—showing remarkable culinary skill.
Researchers found evidence that early humans detoxified wild plants such as bitter vetch and almonds by soaking and boiling them. These complex steps turned otherwise inedible plants into nutritious and flavorful foods—demonstrating advanced understanding of chemistry and health.
Similar discoveries in Israel’s Kebara Cave and Borneo’s Niah Cave show that complex food processing was common across early human populations. Charred plant fossils revealed that people roasted, ground, and boiled wild almonds, acorns, and yams up to 65,000 years ago.
This growing body of evidence challenges the idea that humans evolved their technology slowly. Instead, it supports the biblical view of sudden human exceptionalism—creative, intelligent beings capable of adapting and innovating from the beginning.
Unlike other hominids such as Neanderthals or Denisovans, early humans demonstrated mastery of fire, cooking, and planning. This aligns with the Genesis account of humans made in God’s image, uniquely able to cultivate the earth and use reason for purposeful living.