this post was submitted on 29 Mar 2024
624 points (97.4% liked)
MST3K
930 readers
60 users here now
Rules/guidelines/info
- Please be nice to each other
- Don't post stuff that doesn't belong
- These rules are temporary as the community is new - suggestions welcome
- Watch out for snakes!
You know you want links, baby!
- MST3K.com
- Gizmoplex
- Rifftrax
- The Mads Are Back
- The Mary Jo Pehl Show
- YouTube
- Wikipedia
- TV Tropes
- Annotated MST
- Fandom
- Suggestions welcome
This community is hosted at https://lemmy.world/c/mst3k and moderated by:
If you were a mod on /r/MST3K give me a shout.
Confused about Lemmy/Fediverse? Here's a useful infographic
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I have seen this image many times in my uni courses.
when european first reached the continent, the breeding of the plant was heavily advance, somewhat on the right side of thr image
this is one of the staple crops without which we could not survive.
the current varieties are so productive, but they require all modern farming methods, which can be impactful
if you want to apply biological agriculture, the mkst recent varieties are not a good pick, unless they actively support that
that image also serve as a quick explaination as to how our food systems evolved. When you read ancient folk tales, or even when you read about these plants in Biblical texts, imagine the one on the mid left. A small plant capable of supporting a limited amount of people
What I think is more interesting in terms of New World staples is what the indigenous people of the Andes did with the potato. Not only did the cultivate dozens of varieties, they also learned how to freeze-dry them for long-term storage. That's amazing for people who just barely entered the bronze age by the time of European contact.