WASHINGTON, DC.- People living along the coast of Peru were eating popcorn 1,000 years earlier than previously reported and before ceramic pottery was used there, according to a new paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences co-authored by Dolores Piperno, curator of New World archaeology at the Smithsonians National Museum of Natural History and emeritus staff scientist at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute. Some of the oldest known corncobs, husks, stalks and tassels (male flowers), dating from 6,700 to 3,000 years ago were found at Paredones and Huaca Prieta, two mound sites on Perus arid northern coast. The research group, led by Tom Dillehay from Vanderbilt University and Duccio Bonavia from Perus Academia Nacional de la Historia, also found corn microfossils: starch grains and phytoliths. Character-