Growing the lost crops of eastern North America's original agricultural system

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作者
Natalie G. Mueller
Gayle J. Fritz
Paul Patton
Stephen Carmody
Elizabeth T. Horton
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[1] Washington University,Department of Anthropology
[2] Ohio University,Department of Sociology and Anthropology and Food Studies Theme
[3] The Sewanee/Yale Collaborative for Southern Appalachian and Place-Based Studies,Department of Archaeology
[4] Sewanee University,undefined
[5] Arkansas State Archaeological Survey,undefined
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Thousands of years before the maize-based agriculture practiced by many Native American societies in eastern North America at the time of contact with Europeans, there existed a unique crop system only known through archaeological evidence. There are no written or oral records of how these lost crops were cultivated, but several domesticated subspecies have been identified in the archaeological record. Growth experiments and observations of living progenitors of these crops can provide insights into the ancient agricultural system of eastern North America, the role of developmental plasticity in the process of domestication, and the creation and maintenance of diverse landraces under cultivation. In addition, experimental gardens are potent tools for public education, and can also be used to conserve remaining populations of lost crop progenitors and explore the possibility of re-domesticating these species.
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