5,200-year-old grains in the eastern Altai Mountains redate trans-Eurasian crop exchange
on phys.org

Cereals from the Fertile Crescent and broomcorn millet from northern China spread across the ancient world, integrating into complex farming systems that used crop-rotation cycles enabled by the different ecological regions of origin. The resulting productivity allowed for demographic expansions and imperial formation in Europe and Asia. In this study, an international, interdisciplinary team of scientists illustrate that people moved these crops across Eurasia earlier than previously realized, adapting cultivation methods for harsh agricultural environments.
[Source: phys.org] [ Comments ] [See why this is trending]
[Source: phys.org] [ Comments ] [See why this is trending]
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