New Lives for Ancient and Extinct Crops

New Lives for Ancient and Extinct Crops

  • Paul E. Minnis
Publisher:University of Arizona PressISBN 13: 9780816544837ISBN 10: 0816544832

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New Lives for Ancient and Extinct Crops is written by Paul E. Minnis and published by University of Arizona Press. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 0816544832 (ISBN 10) and 9780816544837 (ISBN 13).

Over many millennia, farmers across the world have domesticated literally thousands of species and developed tens of thousands of varieties of these plants. Despite the astonishing agricultural diversity that existed long ago, the world’s current food base has narrowed to a dangerous level. By studying the long and dynamic history of farming in the ancient past, archaeology can play a part in helping ensure the stability of the human food supply by identifying once-important crops and showing where and how such crops were grown in the past. Thanks to this work, extinct crops might even be redomesticated from their wild progenitors. New Lives for Ancient and Extinct Crops profiles nine plant species that were important contributors to human diets and had medicinal uses in antiquity: maygrass, chenopod, marshelder, agave, little barley, chia, arrowroot, little millet, and bitter vetch. Each chapter is written by a well-known scholar, who illustrates the global value of the ancient crop record to inform the present. From eastern and western North America, Mesoamerica, South America, western Asia, and south-central Asia, the contributors provide examples of the unexpected wealth of information available in the archaeological record about ancient and extinct crops.