Anyone ever found Beans?

HillBilly244

Sr. Member
May 4, 2013
350
1,143

Attachments

  • 20210129_105502.jpg
    20210129_105502.jpg
    1.3 MB · Views: 83
Upvote 0
Squirrels maybe? :dontknow:

I highly doubt that, this site is covered by water the majority of the year. I've heard of beans and different things being found on ancient sites but I'm not ruling anything out.
 

Had some beans last night at.... a Holiday Inn :)
 

Where you were digging was it by chance a small mound brownish green. I have seen such and it was un digested plant seeds. :icon_thumleft:
 

Yes, beans and corn both. On a 15th century site near Clyde Ohio. If they are carbonized they survive just like charcoal (because they are). The beans looked like small dried navy or kidney beans. Yours look more like squash or sunflower seeds, also possibilities. Is there evidence of occupation at your site, pottery, fire cracked rock, or a plowed out hearth. If all of the above are absent and the seeds aren't carbonized, then you've dug out a field voles winter food Stache.
 

I have not.
But it's certainly an interesting topic.

[The beans were in a clay pot sealed with pine tar and were determined by radio carbon dating to be over 1,500 years old, yet some still germinated! The beans were simply called "New Mexico Cave Beans" after the discovery of the half dozen or so beans found in a cave once inhabited by Native American peoples. ]

Anasazi beans- Ellen's Kitchen.
 

Yes, beans and corn both. On a 15th century site near Clyde Ohio. If they are carbonized they survive just like charcoal (because they are). The beans looked like small dried navy or kidney beans. Yours look more like squash or sunflower seeds, also possibilities. Is there evidence of occupation at your site, pottery, fire cracked rock, or a plowed out hearth. If all of the above are absent and the seeds aren't carbonized, then you've dug out a field voles winter food Stache.

There is evidence that this site had been settled paleo to woodland era. We have found pottery, points, stones, pipes etc... they were at the same level as most of the artifacts.
 

Probably left from animal PooP!

On a side note...50 years ago my dad would entertain us kids by saying
"Beans beans, The musical fruit.
The more you eat, the more you toot.
The more you toot, the better you feel.
Let's have beans for every meal."
 

On a side note...50 years ago my dad would entertain us kids by saying
"Beans beans, The musical fruit.
The more you eat, the more you toot.
The more you toot, the better you feel.
Let's have beans for every meal."

The version I grew up with was,

"Pork and beans are good for the heart.
The more you eat , the more you fart."
 

I dug a handful of four corners potatoes one winter and had no clue what i had. after some research and growing them i discovered they were called four corners potatoes and had most likely been growing annually at the site for over 1000yrs. I was able to identify the plant the next summer once it started to bloom and determined it had sent roots into the dry overhang we had been digging. They are extremely resilient having survived dust bowl and hard winters. Definitely plant a few and see what happens. Growing the plant ultimately helped me ID the spuds and gave me an idea what to look for in nature. They may or may not germinate but you won't know until you try.
 

Isle 5... all the way down... left hand side.
 

Actually, at least around here, the last line is "so eat more beans with every meal".
 

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top