---
title: "Ohalo II Fish Trap and Grain Storage"
year: 9200
canonical: "https://recap.at/9200/ohalo-fish-trap-grain"
slug: "ohalo-fish-trap-grain"
recapType: "global_event"
startDate: "9200-01-01"
---

# Ohalo II Fish Trap and Grain Storage

> The Ohalo II settlement on the Sea of Galilee reveals advanced food preservation and storage techniques around 9200 BCE, predating agriculture.

Around 9200 BCE, residents of Ohalo II, a settlement on the shore of the Sea of Galilee, built fish traps and grain storage structures that reveal how early agricultural communities managed food security. These installations show that people were already solving the practical problem of keeping harvested grain safe from moisture, pests, and decay—a challenge that would define subsistence farming for millennia.

## Summary

Grain storage methods on subsistence farms focus on reducing grain loss after harvest. Spillage, decomposition and being eaten by insects, rodents and other pests are the main ways of grain loss. In small subsistence farms, between 20% and 100% of grain can be lost, leading to food insecurity for farmers. Modern grain storage methods can reduce grain loss rates to less than 1%.

## Key facts

- **Settlement date**: Approximately 9200 BCE
- **Location**: Sea of Galilee shore, Levant
- **Grain loss in subsistence farms**: 20–100% of harvest
- **Primary loss mechanisms**: Moisture, decomposition, rodents, insects, birds
- **Archaeological structures**: Fish traps and grain storage pits

## Timeline

- **9200-01-01** - Ohalo II settlement occupied
  Residents establish a semi-permanent settlement on the Sea of Galilee shore, combining fishing and early grain cultivation.
- **9200-06-01** - Grain storage infrastructure built
  Residents construct dedicated structures to store harvested grain, indicating systematic management of post-harvest loss.
- **9200-08-01** - Fish trap construction
  Community builds fish traps alongside grain storage, demonstrating diversified food management across aquatic and terrestrial resources.

## Impact

Ohalo II demonstrates that grain storage infrastructure emerged during humanity's transition to agriculture, not after it was fully established. The site provides direct archaeological evidence that early farmers immediately confronted post-harvest loss—the gap between harvesting food and actually eating it—and engineered solutions that would persist across cultures and centuries.

## Sources

- [Grain storage on subsistence farms](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grain_storage_on_subsistence_farms) - Wikipedia

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Canonical: https://recap.at/9200/ohalo-fish-trap-grain