9780806124100-0806124105-Of Plants and People

Of Plants and People

ISBN-13: 9780806124100
ISBN-10: 0806124105
Edition: Revised
Author: Charles B. Heiser
Publication date: 1992
Publisher: University of Oklahoma Press
Format: Paperback 252 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780806124100
ISBN-10: 0806124105
Edition: Revised
Author: Charles B. Heiser
Publication date: 1992
Publisher: University of Oklahoma Press
Format: Paperback 252 pages

Summary

Of Plants and People (ISBN-13: 9780806124100 and ISBN-10: 0806124105), written by authors Charles B. Heiser, was published by University of Oklahoma Press in 1992. With an overall rating of 3.6 stars, it's a notable title among other Biology (Biological Sciences, Botany, Conservation, Nature & Ecology) books. You can easily purchase or rent Of Plants and People (Paperback) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Biology books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.41.

Description

What are the origins of agriculture? How did people learn to domesticate plants? How did they come to improve some? How did they learn special techniques for processing certain plants for food?

In these highly personal and informal essays-old-fashioned botany, the author calls them-noted botanist Charles Heiser investigates those and other questions raised by the interactions of plants and people. His purpose is to try to find the origins of some of our domesticated plants and to consider other plants that might someday contribute to our food resources.

In Of Plants and People, Heiser examines the origins of pumpkins, squashes, and other cucurbits. In The Totora and Thor, he digresses from food plants to trace the spread of the totora reed from South America to Pacific islands. Little Oranges of Quito is about the domestication of a wild plant, the naranjilla, that is going on today. Chenopods: From Weeds to the Halls of Montezuma concerns the uses of the Andean quinua and its relatives, and Sangorache and the Day of the Dead, A Trip to Tulcán, and Chochos and Other Lupines all examine Latin-American domestic plants that could contribute to our own foods. Green ‘Tomatoes’ and Purple 'Cucumbers, the tomate and the pepino, respectively, describes two other crops that have received scant notice in the United States.

The subject of "How Many Kinds of Peppers Are There?" is the genus Capsicum, with its sweet green and hot red peppers and all their related species and varieties. Heiser again writes about nonfood plants in the essay "Peperomias," but in the next chapter, "Sumpweed," he discusses a plant that was once used for food but that has been neglected in favor of others. And in "A Plague of Locusts" the author compares the honey locust tree with a close relative to try to determine what gives particular plants advantages in certain environments.

In his final essay, Seeds, Sex, and Sacrifice, Heiser relates myth, anthropological evidence, and botanical findings to review the connection between religion and the origin of agriculture.

The audience for this book will include botanists, horticulturists, anthropologists, and any reader interested in the interrelationships between plants and people.

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