Editorial on the Research TopicFrontiers in the study of ancient plant remains Scholarly curiosity about ancient plants and their roles in projected archaeology can be traced back to the 19 th century when archaeologists frequently encountered charred and desiccated remains at prehistoric sites in Europe and Egypt (Renfrew, 1973). Among the early explorers, Oswald von Heer's (1865) work at Swiss Lake dwellings resonates much with modern-day inquiries and is often associated with the birthplace of paleoethnobotany. From the 1960s onwards, the study of ancient plant remains has been intricately entwined with the emerging concerns of food production and subsistence, and generally foodways in its multiple facets, dietary and symbolic, ecologic and economic, environmental and political in a range of environments can be categorized as the 'West', including southwestern Asia, Europe and North America (Higgs, 1972;Renfrew, 1973;Watson, 1976).Much of the recent developments are from the global south, including East Asia, about which little was known archaeobotanically a few decades ago. The recent flourish over the last decade or so has been a transformative time in which considerable momentum was forged towards a better understanding of Asian prehistory. The consequent knowledge generated has profound implications for the understanding of the human past on a more global scale (McRostie, 2013;Liu et al., 2019;Pavlik et al., 2021;He et al., 2022). The 26 manuscripts included in this Research Topic celebrate the recent florescence and its deep roots. Collectively, the authors played a role in bringing novel lab and field-based practices into the enterprise and in bridging conceptual gaps between different theoretical strains. The interdisciplinary studies presented in the topic elucidate the spatial and temporal scales of recent development emphasizing not only on the plant itself but the humanity underlying its production and consumption.The 26 papers in this Research Topic can be summarized into four main themes: methodological improvement, research on the relationship between ancient human activities and the environment, early food production, and paleoenvironment, paleoecology and climate changes. The methodological studies include ethnological methods, microbiological analysis, fossil morphology and stable isotope studies, etc.