food plants. modern day inuit - greenland contemporary hunter-gatherers the san bushmen

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Food Plants

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Page 1: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Food Plants

Page 2: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Modern Day Inuit - Greenland

Page 3: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Contemporary Hunter-GatherersThe San Bushmen

Page 4: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Torres Straits Islands

Page 5: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Origin of Domesticated Plants

Wheat

Page 6: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Most domesticated food plants have been selected for:

• large plant parts

• soft edible tissue

• thick flesh with intense color

• fruits attached to tough stems

Page 7: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

How much domestication?

• About 5000 species have been grown for human food – less than 1% of all plant species

• Today about 150 species are commercially grown for food (not including spices)

• About 50 very productive species supply almost all of our caloric needs

Page 8: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Benefits of Domestication

• 10,000 years ago, before agriculture began, the world’s total human population was about 5 million. There was one person for every 25 square kilometers. Today we have more than 7.24 billion people, with a density of just over 25 people per square kilometer

Page 9: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

As agriculture developed humans selected for:

1. Plants that provide enough calories to meet our basic energy needs. This usually comes from cereal grain or root carbohydrates.

2. We also selected for a balanced nutritional intake - this tends to develop in any system where the cultivator eats and depends upon on what he/she grows.

Page 10: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Vavilov centers – centers of plant diversity and areas of origin for agriculture

Page 11: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Plants from Near East – Fertile Crescent

• barley (Hordeum vulgare) • wheat (Triticum) • lentils (Lens culinaris) • peas (Pisum sativum)• chickpeas or garbanzos (Cicer arietinum) • olives (Olea europaea) • dates (Phoenix dactylifera)• grapes (Vitis vinifera) - Wine began to be made

from the grapes and beer from the grains• flax (Linum usitatissimum) – food and fiber

Page 12: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Barley

Page 13: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Lentils

Page 14: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Chickpeas

Page 15: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Date Palm

Page 16: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Flax

Page 17: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Plants from China, Far East

• Millet – several cereal grains

• Rice (Oryza sativa)

• Soybeans (Glycine max)

• Mango (Mangifera indica)

• Various kinds of citrus fruits (Citrus sp.)

• Taro (Colocasia esculenta)

• Bananas (Musa x paradisiaca)

Page 18: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Rice

Page 19: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Mango

Page 20: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Taro

Page 21: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Plants from Africa

• sorghum (Sorghum sp.)

• millet grains (several species)

• okra (Hibiscus esculentus)

• yams (Dioscrorea sp.)

• cotton (Gossypium sp.)

• Coffee (Coffea arabica)

Page 22: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Sorghum and Millet

Page 23: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Okra

Page 24: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Yams

Page 25: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Coffee

Page 26: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Plants from Mexico• corn (Zea mays), • kidney beans (Phaseolus

vulgaris) • lima beans (P. lunatus) • peanuts (Arachis

hypogaea)• cotton (developed

independently from Africa)

• chili peppers (Capiscum sp.)

• tomatoes (Lycopersicon sp.)

• tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum)

• cacao (Theobroma cacao) • pineapple (Ananas

comosus) • Pumpkins, squashes

(Cucurbita sp.) • avocados (Persea

americana)

Page 27: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Kidney Beans

Page 28: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Peanut

Page 29: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Chili Peppers – Capiscum sp.

Page 30: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Pumpkins and Squashes

Page 31: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Theobroma cacoa

Page 32: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Plants from Peru

• potato (Solanum tuberosum and many related species)

• quinoa (Chenopodium quinoa)

• tomatoes and peanuts may have really originated in Peru and then been taken to Mexico

Page 33: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Potato

Page 34: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Quinoa

Page 35: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Corn – Zea mays

Page 36: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Typical Corn Growth

Page 37: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Typical ear of corn

Page 38: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Variation in ear size and kernel color fromMexican landraces of corn

Page 39: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Zeamayssubsp.mexicana

Zeamayssubsp.mays

Page 40: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Teosinte – Zea diploperennis

Page 41: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Ear of teosinte – Zea diploperennis

Page 42: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Teosinte vs. Corn Growth

Teosinte Corn

Page 43: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Zea mays

Page 44: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Maize Types

Page 45: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Maize productivity

• Maize is tremendously productive - a typical Iowa cornfield will produce 3500 - 4000 g of carbon per meter squared per year - The most productive tropical rainforest or coastal salt marsh produce about 3500 g of carbon per meter squared per year

Page 46: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Maize productivity

• Maize is so valuable because it is productive across a huge range of conditions – temperate to tropical (following adaptation to different day lengths)

• Among modern cereal grains it is the most efficient in converting water and carbon dioxide into grains food

• However, it requires large amounts of nutrients and current high yields such as occur in farm land around here require the input of tremendous amounts of fertilizer

Page 47: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Cross section of corn leaf

Page 48: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Cross section of cornleaf showing C-4pathway

Page 49: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

The One Food Problem

Page 50: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Cliff House at Mesa Verde – circa 1200 AD

Page 51: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen
Page 52: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Beginnings of the Anasazi

• During their so-called Archaic Period (5500 - 100 BCE) the Anasazi were hunter-gatherers - they lived mostly on roasted seeds of Indian grass (Oryzopsis sp.), cattails (Typha lattifolia), salt bush (Atriplex canescens - Chenopodiaceae), and sheep sorrel (Rumex acetosella - Polygonaceae); Rabbits and a few deer provided the bulk of the animal protein in the diet - they lived mostly in caves or in depressions with simple coverings made of juniper branches (Juniperus scopulorum - Cupressaceae)

Page 53: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Oryzopsis sp. – Indian ricegrass

Page 54: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Atriplex canescens - saltbush

Page 55: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Typha latifolia - cattail

Page 56: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Rumex acetosella – sheep sorrel

Page 57: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Changes to Anasazi life

• About 100 BCE, maize plants arrived and Anasazi life began to change - at first the Anasazi did not adopt maize except as a novelty

• About 100 BCE, Anasazi made a change to the so called Basket Maker II lifestyle in which they made baskets, sandals, and nets woven from yucca fibers (Yucca baccata - Agavaceae)

Page 58: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Yucca baccata

Page 59: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Anasazi yucca products

Page 60: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Basket Maker III

• Basket maker III was from about 400 - 700 AD - here they became much more agricultural - probably due to the arrival of beans Phaseolus vulgaris (pinto and kidney beans) and P. acutifolius (tepary or pavi beans)

• The Anasazi began to select maize varieties with larger ears and more productivity

• They also begin to experiment with irrigation and developed or acquired bows and arrows

Page 61: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Phaseolus vulgaris – pinto, kidney beans

Page 62: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Phaseolus acutifolius – tepary or pavi bean

Page 63: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Pueblo I

• Pueblo I lasted from 700-900 AD - here the Anasazi adopted an increasingly sedentary lifestyle with advances in basketry and pottery, cotton was used for cloth, dwellings were made of stone above ground with pit houses transformed into ceremonial kivas

• Large stores of grain made higher populations possible and also led to warfare and raiding for grain

Page 64: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Anasazi Runi

Page 65: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Pueblo II and III

• Pueblo II (900 - 1100 AD) and Pueblo III ( 1100 - 1300 AD) saw the development of even larger towns and cities, dwellings were built in cliffs for protection - made very sophisticated baskets and pottery, had highly developed irrigation systems - may have used captive turkeys for meat, feeding them on grain

• Then from 1276 to 1299 there was 23 years of continuous drought - the Anasazi ultimately abandoned their cities and moved south to better drainage areas - today their descendents survive as the Zuni, Hopi, and Rio Grande Pueblo tribes

Page 66: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Timeline of Anasazi culture

Page 67: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

What the Anasazi Left

Page 68: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

For Love of the Potato

Page 69: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

The Potato Comes to Europe

• The potato came to Europe about 1565 - at first, most people in Europe, including the Irish, used the potato as a back up for grain production, but by the end of the 17th century, it had become an important winter food; by the mid-eighteenth century it was a general field crop and provided the staple diet of small farmers during most of the year

Page 70: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Benefits of the Potato

Page 71: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Van Gogh – The Potato Eaters

Page 72: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Ukrainian Food

Potato Pancakes Borsch

Page 73: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Potato Vodka

Page 74: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen
Page 75: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Young potato plant with early stage of late blight

Page 76: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Dried potato leaf infected with late blight – Phytophthora infestans

Page 77: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Potato tubers with Late Blight

Page 78: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Potato field infected with late blight – Infection started in center of field

Page 79: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Severity of blight and famine

Page 80: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Cartoon of Irish “Bogtrotters” circa 1840’s

Page 81: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Irish family diggingPotatoes - 1847

Page 82: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Irish family potato dinner - 1846

Page 83: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Irish food riots - 1847

Page 84: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Irish food sent to England – 1847 or 1848

Page 85: Food Plants. Modern Day Inuit - Greenland Contemporary Hunter-Gatherers The San Bushmen

Lessons learned?

“Whatever may be the misfortunes of Ireland, the potato is not implicated. It, on the contrary, has more than done its duty, in giving them bones and sinew cheap ... There is no other crop equal to the potato in the power of sustaining life and health.”

- Bain 1848