Ritualistic Caffeine Consumption in Cahokia and Beyond

Although caffeine consumption in America is generally associated with the post-industrial world, its origins lie in Native American societies more than 900 years ago. For example, people living in Cahokia – the largest pre-Columbian city north of Mexico – frequently consumed a caffeinated brew made from the roasted leaves of the yaupon holly, a plant containing caffeine (figure 1). This dark tea, later coined “Black Drink” by European explorers, became central to Cahokian purification rituals. As noted by Euroamerican observers, these practices sought to purify the body before important events such as individual or community religious rituals, important political councils and negotiations, ball games, and war parties. (Crown et al. 2012). 

Figure 1. A photograph of a yaupon holly bush for the Florida Native Plant Society. Photograph by Shirley Denton.

Yaupon holly has a caffeine content as high as six times that of strong coffee, causing it to induce sweating. When consumed in high quantities in rapid succession, it can even lead to vomiting. As part of the purification rituals, men would likely sit in circles, sing or chant, and take turns chugging Black Drink from cups made of marine shells and vomiting. In fact, the historical use of yaupon holly to vomit is what has given it its scientific name to this day: Ilex vomitoria (Richmond 2018).  

Interestingly, Black Drink connects to our discussion of Cahokians’ interconnectedness with other Native peoples, as the holly trees from which the leaves were taken are found in the Coastal Plain of the southeastern US from Virginia to Florida and west to Texas (Crown et al. 2012). Thus, these trees were hundreds of miles away from Cahokia, requiring complex systems of trade to transport their leaves – a “level of political organization not before seen in North America” (Yates 2012). 

However, this practice of long distance trade wasn’t unique to the Cahokians, as various other Native American civilizations also procured holly leaves via trade, likely using them for ritualistic purposes as well. An expert in the Chaco Canyon, archaeologist Patricia Crown led a team that analyzed 177 pottery samples from 18 sites across the American Southwest and Mexico. They found caffeine residue on pieces of jars, pitchers and mugs – such as the drinking vessel shown in figure 2 – in 40 samples from 12 sites and concluded that the groups likely consumed stimulant drinks in communal, ritual gatherings (Carpenter 2015). The fact that Black Drink was not just consumed by American Southwesterners and Cahokians, but also that both groups show signs of using it ritualistically tells of a remarkably interconnected pre-Columbian North America. Perhaps along intertwining trade routes such cultural practices as purification rituals were exchanged, creating the interconnectedness that the widespread use of holly leaves suggests.

Figure 2. A drinking vessel found with caffeine residue from the Grasshopper Pueblo archaeological site in central Arizona. Photograph by Patricia Crown.

References:

  • Crown, Patricia L., Thomas E. Emerson, Jiyan Gu, W. Jeffrey Hurst, Timothy R. Pauketat, and Timothy Ward. “Ritual Black Drink Consumption at Cahokia.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 109, no. 35 (2012): 13944–49. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1208404109. 
  • Richmond, Ben. “The Forgotten Drink That Caffeinated North America for Centuries.” Atlas Obscura, January 9, 2020. https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/what-is-yaupon-tea-cassina. 
  • Yates, Diana. “Researchers Find Evidence of Ritual Use of ‘black Drink’ at Cahokia.” Illinois, August 6, 2012. https://news.illinois.edu/view/6367/205015. 
  • Carpenter, Murray. “1,000 Years Ago, Caffeinated Drinks Had Native Americans Buzzing.” NPR, September 8, 2015. https://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2015/09/08/437580856/1-000-years-ago-caffeinated-drinks-had-native-americans-buzzing.

Further Reading:

What Burial Analysis Reveals About the Chinchorro People

The Chinchorro people lived in an ancient, segmentary society – whose earliest sites date to about 7,000 BCE – in the coastal regions of modern-day Chile and southern Peru. They are famous for their elaborate mummification practices spanning 4,000 years across five distinct styles of mummification (CNN Travel, 2019). From these well-preserved mummies, archaeologists have been able to use burial analysis – overviewed in Chapter 5 of the Renfrew reading from this week – to learn about the Chinchorro culture. 

First found by German archaeologist Max Uhle in 1917, the Chinchorro mummies have come to be known as the oldest mummies in the world – predating Egyptian mummies by over two millennia. The process of mummification was puzzlingly complex, involving the removal of the body’s skin, flesh, organs, and brain, a reassembly of the bones with twigs, the reapplication of the skin to the body, the painting of an ash paste over the body, and the application of a final layer of either black or ocher paint to the entirety of the mummified body (Britannica, n.d).

Figure 1: Two sculptures from local artists Paola Pimentel and Johnny Vásquez depicting Chinchorro Mummies in Chile’s Atacama Desert. Photographed by Mark Johanson, CNN 2019.

These mummies, as well as burial analysis more generally, are able to shine a unique light on the individual, an aspect of the past “seen all too rarely” in archaeology (Renfrew 2018, 157). One of the most important facets of life that burial analysis can reveal about past individuals is social status, or, in the case of the Chinchorro, the relative lack thereof. The Chinchorro mummies reveal signs of a markedly egalitarian culture, with all members of society – men, women, children, the elderly, babies, and even fetuses –  receiving the same, elaborate burial. This differs greatly from other ancient cultures that practiced mummification, such as the Egyptians, who reserved the practice for deceased members of the elite (BBC, 2021).

We can also learn a great deal about the diet and lifestyle of the Chinchorro from their mummies. Stable isotope analysis of the hair and human bones of the mummies indicates that nearly 90 percent of Chinchorro diets came from maritime food sources, and the other 10 percent from terrestrial animals and terrestrial plants (ThoughtCo, 2017). Other archaeological data, such as coastal middens and sophisticated fishing tool assemblages, reveal that the Chinchorro people primarily ate fish, coastal birds, and sea mammals. 

Further analysis of the mummies can also elucidate the Chinchorro’s relationship with the environment. Many archaeologists argue that Chinchorro mortuary practice was a cultural reaction to environmental forces. For example, in his 2005 journal article on the subject, Bernardo T. Arriaza highlights how arsenic levels present in the Camarones River, a body of water central to the Chinchorro, are “a hundred times the modern safety level” (Arriaza 2005). He thus correlates the high percentage of infant burials found in the early stages of Chinchorro mummification with infants’ greater susceptibility to Arsenic poisoning in order to argue that high arsenic levels initiated the Chinchorro’s cultural practice of mummification.

Figure 2: Arsenic levels in northern and Chinchorro sites along the coast. Uploaded by Dr. Sam Byrne to ResearchGate, 2010.

References:

Hirst, K. Kris. “Chinchorro Culture.” ThoughtCo, March 8, 2017. https://www.thoughtco.com/what-was-the-chinchorro-culture-170502.

Johanson, Mark. “Surprise! The World’s Oldest Mummies Are Not in Egypt.” CNN, May 1, 2019. https://www.cnn.com/travel/article/worlds-oldest-mummies-chile/index.html. 

Chambers, Jane. “Living with the World’s Oldest Mummies.” BBC News, October 24, 2021. https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-58639748. 

Lohnes, Kate. “That’s a Wrap: Methods of Mummification.” Encyclopædia Britannica, n.d https://www.britannica.com/story/thats-a-wrap-methods-of-mummification.

Arriaza, Bernardo T. “ARSENIASIS AS AN ENVIRONMENTAL HYPOTHETICAL EXPLANATION FOR THE ORIGIN OF THE OLDEST ARTIFICIAL MUMMIFICATION PRACTICE IN THE WORLD.” Chungara: Revista de Antropología Chilena 37, no. 2 (2005): 255–60. http://www.jstor.org/stable/27802425.

Further Reading:

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/worlds-oldest-mummies-get-ct-scan-180961578/

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/travel/article/can-unesco-status-save-the-worlds-oldest-mummies