Domestication of plants and animals

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Domestication of plants and animals

Article purpose:

  • domestication of plants and animals as transition from Paleolithic to Neolithic
  • sedentary lifestyle as preceding and not necessarily the result of that transition from paleolithic to neolithic
  • domestication across time and space, including
    • dogs
    • horses
    • grasses
    • tubers (enlarged, fleshy stem, usually underground of plants such as carrots, potatoes, yams)

todo:

  • see Lil J p. 236 on 3 advantages of Fertile Crescent
  • break into separate articles for plants and animals

domestication etymology[edit | edit source]

  • "domestication"
    • = act of taming, breeding, controlling plants and animals
    • from domestic ("or or for the house") + -ation (making of)
      • = making something of the house (home)
      • from Latin domus for house, household, home
        • from PIE *dem- meaning the same
  • definitions and uses of the word "domestic"
    • domestic (noun)
      • a person who works in a house or home, generally for cleaning, cooking, child care
      • a locally or nationally made product (not made overseas)
    • domestic (adj)
      • related to the household
        • as in "domestic chores" or "domestic life"
      • related, from, or made in a country
        • as in "the domestic economy" or "domestic production"
      • an animal kept in a house
  • domesticated
    • past participle adjective
    • = "having been tamed"
      • generally for animals
    • or having been brought into a home or household

domestication origins timeline[edit | edit source]

domestication of animals

domestication of plants