Skip to main content
Ref ID: 37259
Ref Type: Book Section
Authors: Fuller, Dorian Q.
Title: A series of cereals: a global archaeology of domestication, cereal agriculture and staple foods
Date: 2022
Source: Ancient Grains in Modern Soils
Place of Publication: Lancaster, Pennsylvania
Publisher: DEStech
Abstract: Cereals, together with other seed crops like grain legumes and pseudo-cereals, have been fundamental to the transformation of human economies from hunting and gathering to agriculture and urbanization. The study of archaeological plant remains, archaeobotany, provides a growing dataset through which domestication and the spread of these crops can be mapped in both time and space over the long-term. Archaeobotanical remains provide evidence for how crops evolved during the domestication process, including non-shattering spikes and increased grain size. The evolution of domestication can be then analyzed as a co-evolutionary process with human behaviors, technologies and cooking traditions can be recognized that were related to different cases of agricultural origins and have had a first cereal domestications, agriculture has had the challenge of diversity loss but also recurrent period of diversity gain through new domestications and through the transfer of crop diversity between cultures.
Editors: Cooper, Raymond
Page Start: 3
Page End: 37