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This volume presents a completely new and very substantial body of
information about the origin of agriculture and plant use in
Africa. All the evidence is very recent and for the first time all
this archaeobotanical evidence is brought together in one volume
(at present the information is unpublished or published in many
disparate journals, confer ence reports, monographs, site reports,
etc. ). Early publications concerned with the origins of African
plant domestication relied almost exclusively on inferences made
from the modem distribution of the wild progenitors of African
cultivars; there existed virtually no archaeobotanical data at that
time. Even as recently as the early 1990s direct evidence for the
transition to farming and the relative roles of indigenous versus
Near Eastern crops was lacking for most of Africa. This volume
changes that and presents a wide range of ex citing new evidence,
including case studies from Nigeria, Burkina Faso, Ethiopia,
Uganda, Egypt, and Sudan, which range in date from 8000 BP to the
present day. The volume ad dresses topics such as the role of wild
plant resources in hunter-gatherer and farming com munities, the
origins of agriculture, the agricultural foundation of complex
societies, long-distance trade, the exchange of foods and crops,
and the human impact on local vege tation-all key issues of current
research in archaeology, anthropology, agronomy, ecol ogy, and
economic history."
This volume presents a completely new and very substantial body of
information about the origin of agriculture and plant use in
Africa. All the evidence is very recent and for the first time all
this archaeobotanical evidence is brought together in one volume
(at present the information is unpublished or published in many
disparate journals, confer ence reports, monographs, site reports,
etc. ). Early publications concerned with the origins of African
plant domestication relied almost exclusively on inferences made
from the modem distribution of the wild progenitors of African
cultivars; there existed virtually no archaeobotanical data at that
time. Even as recently as the early 1990s direct evidence for the
transition to farming and the relative roles of indigenous versus
Near Eastern crops was lacking for most of Africa. This volume
changes that and presents a wide range of ex citing new evidence,
including case studies from Nigeria, Burkina Faso, Ethiopia,
Uganda, Egypt, and Sudan, which range in date from 8000 BP to the
present day. The volume ad dresses topics such as the role of wild
plant resources in hunter-gatherer and farming com munities, the
origins of agriculture, the agricultural foundation of complex
societies, long-distance trade, the exchange of foods and crops,
and the human impact on local vege tation-all key issues of current
research in archaeology, anthropology, agronomy, ecol ogy, and
economic history."
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