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51 results for "agriculture" — page 1 of 3
E_3_12 — Agriculture: Origins, Spread, and Civilizational Impact
Agriculture — the deliberate cultivation of plants and domestication of animals for food, fiber, and other products — is arguably the single most consequential technological and social transformation in human history, se
ZC_3_04 — Sociology of Food and Agriculture
Sociology of food examines food as a social phenomenon — how production, distribution, preparation, and consumption are shaped by power, culture, class, gender, and global economic structures. Sidney Mintz (Sweetness and
ZE_3_11 — Food Ethics — Agriculture, Animal Use, and Sacred Dietary Laws
Food ethics examines the moral dimensions of what we eat and how we produce it — spanning agricultural systems, animal use, sacred dietary laws, environmental impact, and distributive justice. Industrial animal agricultu
S_3_09 — Vertical Farming and Controlled Environment Agriculture
Vertical farming grows crops in stacked layers inside controlled indoor environments, typically using hydroponics (nutrient-rich water without soil), aeroponics (misting roots with nutrient solution), or aquaponics (inte
S_5_16 — Vertical Farming: Controlled Environment Agriculture and Urban Food Systems
Vertical farming — the practice of growing crops in vertically stacked layers within controlled indoor environments, using artificial lighting, hydroponic or aeroponic nutrient delivery, and precisely managed climate par
S_2_09 — Cellular Agriculture: Lab-Grown Meat, Fermentation, and Post-Animal Food
Cellular agriculture — the production of animal products (meat, dairy, leather, eggs) directly from cell cultures rather than from whole animals — represents a potentially transformative approach to global food productio
M_5_17 — Natufian Culture: Proto-Agriculture, Sedentism, and the Neolithic Transition
The Natufian culture (ca. 14,500–11,600 years ago) was an Epipalaeolithic archaeological culture of the Levant — spanning modern Israel, Palestine, Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria — that represents the earliest known transiti
M_4_02 — Proto-Agriculture and Managed Landscapes
This document examines Proto-Agriculture and Managed Landscapes, a topic within the Forbidden Archaeology research area. Key areas of investigation include The "Neolithic Revolution" Concept, Independent Invention: A Glo
J_4_03 — Ancient Food Technology — Fermentation, Preservation, and Agriculture
Ancient food technology encompassed far more than simple subsistence — it involved sophisticated biochemistry (fermentation, enzymatic breakdown), engineering (bread ovens, fish sauce factories), and ecological managemen
R_5_03 — Domestication of Plants and Agriculture
The domestication of plants — one of the most transformative events in human history — began independently in at least 10 geographic centers between ~12,000 and 5,000 years ago. The Fertile Crescent (wheat, barley, lenti
F_4_27 — Hunter-Gatherer Societies: Lifeways, Ecology, and the Transition to Agriculture
For over 95% of Homo sapiens history, all humans lived as hunter-gatherers — mobile foragers whose subsistence depended on wild plants, animals, and aquatic resources. Modern ethnographic and archaeological evidence has
W_1_23 — Pre-Pottery Neolithic B (PPNB)
The Pre-Pottery Neolithic B (PPNB, c. 8800–6500 BCE) represents one of the most transformative periods in human history — the era when small communities of early farmers in the Levant and Upper Mesopotamia scaled up into
J_2_22 — Terra Preta: Amazonian Dark Earth and Ancient Soil Engineering
Terra preta (Portuguese for "black earth") — scientifically termed Amazonian Dark Earth (ADE) — is a remarkably fertile, human-created soil found in patches throughout the Amazon Basin, primarily in Brazil but also in Co
J_4_05 — Ancient Agricultural Technology
The technological systems that transformed wild plant gathering into controlled food production — agriculture — represent the most consequential technological revolution in human history, enabling sedentism, population g
O_5_04 — Soil Science — Underground Biogeochemistry and Human Health
Soil — a thin veneer of biologically active, chemically complex material covering most of Earth's land surface — is arguably the most under-appreciated and misunderstood component of the Earth system. Far from inert "dir
L_2_15 — Population Structure of the Ancient Near East: Farming Spread Genetics
The Neolithic Revolution — the independent invention of agriculture in the Fertile Crescent (~10,000-8,000 BCE) — was one of the most consequential transformations in human history, and ancient DNA has revealed that the
F_3_14 — Domestication: How Humans Reshaped Species and Themselves
Domestication — the multigenerational process by which humans selectively breed wild species, producing organisms that are genetically, morphologically, and behaviorally distinct from their wild ancestors and dependent o
F_3_07 — Independent Origins of Plant Domestication
Plant domestication — the process by which wild species are genetically and morphologically transformed through human selection into cultivable, human-dependent crops — arose independently in at least 7–11 geographically
M_2_12 — Çatalhöyük — Neolithic Revolution and Anomalous Urbanism
Çatalhöyük (pronounced "chah-tahl-hö-yük") — a Neolithic proto-city on the Konya Plain of south-central Turkey, occupied approximately 7500–5700 BCE — is one of the most important archaeological sites in the world for un
A_1_24 — Natufian Culture
The Natufian culture (c. 15,000–11,500 BP) represents the critical transitional period between mobile hunter-gatherer lifeways and settled agricultural communities in the Levant. First defined by Dorothy Garrod in 1928 f
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