The American Origin of Agriculture

Nonfiction, Science & Nature, Nature, History, Americas, United States
Cover of the book The American Origin of Agriculture by O. Fuller Cook, Editions Le Mono
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: O. Fuller Cook ISBN: 9782366592504
Publisher: Editions Le Mono Publication: September 9, 2016
Imprint: Editions Le Mono Language: English
Author: O. Fuller Cook
ISBN: 9782366592504
Publisher: Editions Le Mono
Publication: September 9, 2016
Imprint: Editions Le Mono
Language: English

With the exception of the banana, the cultivated plants which were shared with America by the natives of the islands of the Pacific and of the old world tropics appear to be of American origin, and the wide distribution of these plants in the east and the relatively recent domestication of the old world root crops and cereals accord with the suggestion that the agricultural skill and compact social organization of a primitive American culture race were transferred to southern Asia during the movements of conquest and colonization which spread the Malayo-Polynesian linguistic stock from Hawaii and Easter Island to Madagascar and southern Arabia, but long anterior to existing peoples or languages. The cocoanut which affords so direct an intimation of American origin has already explained the failure of those who have attempted to demonstrate identity of languages, customs and arts on the two sides of the Pacific, but also condemns the equally erroneous attitude of others who refuse, in the absence of such identity, to accept the countless trans-Pacific similarities as indications of affinity or common origin. The distribution and uses of the tropical cultivated plants support the belief of ethnologists in the truly indigenous character of the peoples, agricultures and civilizations of the new world, but they also testify to a very early colonization of the islands of the Pacific and Indian oceans from tropical America... If we may not know where man first began to encourage the growth of the plants which furnished his food, we are not without numerous indications that agriculture proper, together with the agricultural organization of human society which lay behind modern civilization, originated in America and has now completed the circuit of the globe.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

With the exception of the banana, the cultivated plants which were shared with America by the natives of the islands of the Pacific and of the old world tropics appear to be of American origin, and the wide distribution of these plants in the east and the relatively recent domestication of the old world root crops and cereals accord with the suggestion that the agricultural skill and compact social organization of a primitive American culture race were transferred to southern Asia during the movements of conquest and colonization which spread the Malayo-Polynesian linguistic stock from Hawaii and Easter Island to Madagascar and southern Arabia, but long anterior to existing peoples or languages. The cocoanut which affords so direct an intimation of American origin has already explained the failure of those who have attempted to demonstrate identity of languages, customs and arts on the two sides of the Pacific, but also condemns the equally erroneous attitude of others who refuse, in the absence of such identity, to accept the countless trans-Pacific similarities as indications of affinity or common origin. The distribution and uses of the tropical cultivated plants support the belief of ethnologists in the truly indigenous character of the peoples, agricultures and civilizations of the new world, but they also testify to a very early colonization of the islands of the Pacific and Indian oceans from tropical America... If we may not know where man first began to encourage the growth of the plants which furnished his food, we are not without numerous indications that agriculture proper, together with the agricultural organization of human society which lay behind modern civilization, originated in America and has now completed the circuit of the globe.

More books from Editions Le Mono

Cover of the book Nietzsche et la guerre by O. Fuller Cook
Cover of the book Ce que l'art doit à Napoléon by O. Fuller Cook
Cover of the book Of our passions and their pathology by O. Fuller Cook
Cover of the book The Human Instincts by O. Fuller Cook
Cover of the book Study of Language by O. Fuller Cook
Cover of the book History of West Indies by O. Fuller Cook
Cover of the book The San Francisco Earthquake: Origin and Consequences of the Previous One. by O. Fuller Cook
Cover of the book A Study of Effects of Smoking by O. Fuller Cook
Cover of the book Bismarck et la France by O. Fuller Cook
Cover of the book On the Interpretation of the Old and New Testament by O. Fuller Cook
Cover of the book The Origin of Music by O. Fuller Cook
Cover of the book Alone with a sea song by O. Fuller Cook
Cover of the book Outlines from the History of Education by O. Fuller Cook
Cover of the book The Ice Age by O. Fuller Cook
Cover of the book The Origin of Slavery among Ants by O. Fuller Cook
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy