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Ancient Americans liked chocolate, too

Research shows that chocolate drinks were served at important ceremonies

Image:  ancient pottery
This vessel from northern Honduras is of the same type and form as the pottery vessels that were analyzed for traces of cacao beverages. The bottle is from the collection of the Instituto Hondureno de Antropologia e Historia, Museo de San Pedro Sula, Honduras.
PNAS / National Academy of Scien
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updated 4:56 p.m. ET Nov. 12, 2007

WASHINGTON - Residents of Central America were enjoying chocolate drinks more than 3,000 years ago, a half millennium earlier than previously thought, new research shows.

Archaeologists led by John Henderson of Cornell University studied the remains of pottery used in the lower Ulua Valley in northern Honduras about 1100 B.C.

Residue from the pots contained theobromine, which occurs only in the cacao plant, the source of chocolate, the researchers said in Monday's online edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences..

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The find dates the first use of chocolate to some 500 years earlier than previously known, they said.

The style of the pottery indicates that cacao was served at important ceremonies to mark weddings and births, according to the authors.

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