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The Origin of Cultivated Plants

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

A. E. Watkins*
Affiliation:
School of Agriculture, Cambridge

Extract

Most developments of civilization demand a settled system of agriculture, and are not compatible with nomadic life. The exact connexion between the rise of civilization and the rise of agriculture is possibly uncertain. The cultivation of different plants developed in different places: rice in the East and wheat in the West, for example. The cultivators may have attained only a low level of culture, and thousands of years may have elapsed before they produced a civilization of which the marks have endured. But to know where the different species of cultivated plants originated must help to trace the origins and diffusion of civilizations.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd 1933

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References

* Papers on the origin and distribution of cultivated plants have been contributed by Vavilov, N.I. to the Bulletin of Applied Botany for 1926, 1927 and 1931.Google Scholar His paper on ‘The problem of the Origin of the World’s Agriculture in the light of the latest Investigations’ is published by Kniga (England) Ltd., Bush House, Aldwych, w.c.2.