The cave also contains some of the earliest evidence for
agriculture in
Greece. Around 7,000 BC, the remains of domesticated plants and animals are found within the cave, interspersed with the usual wild plant and animal species that were hunted and gathered during the
Mesolithic, suggesting that either the inhabitants of Franchthi had begun to practice
agriculture or were trading for seeds and meat with the
Neolithic people who had recently arrived from the
Near East. There has been some debate about whether
agriculture developed locally in
Greece or if it was introduced by peoples from other parts of the world, but experts now generally believed that emigrants from the
Pre-Pottery Neolithic B cultures of the
Near East arrived by boat at the beginning of the seventh millennium BC to settle
Greece (c. 6900 BC), introducing
agriculture. For some time the evidence from Franchthi was used as an example in support of locally developed
agriculture, but more detailed study of the remains has demonstrated that the evidence supports the foreign introduction of domesticated plants and animals. Whatever the source, agricultural practices took off in the area inside and around the cave; sheep and goats are suddenly appear and begin to immediately dominate the faunal presence as wild game and fish drop off dramatically. The
Mesolithic hunter-gatherers of
Greece rapidly adopted the methods introduced to them by these
Neolithic immigrants, including the hunter-gatherers at Franchthi Cave, and it is clear that these peoples had not only become agricultural, but developed an economic society as well. where terracing walls for growing crops were built. It is believed the inhabitants also occupied a village below the Paralia, which is now submerged beneath the sea. Several
anthropomorphic and
zoomorphic figurines have been recovered at Franchthi from the
Neolithic era, and it has been suggested that the site may have served as a workshop for making cockle-shell beads to trade with inland communities during the Early Neolithic. Remains of residential substantial walls, evidently from permanent residence structures, have also been found in the immediate area outside the cave, providing very strong evidence of an early sedentary Neolithic community; more excavation needs to be conducted in this area, but it is estimated that this was quite a large village and extends down to the shoreline and even beneath the current waterline, as is the case with other ancient settlements in the area. == The Bay of Kiladha Project and Underwater Villages ==