lpetrich
Contributor
There is a curious fact about agriculture. All surviving inventions of it date back to earlier in the Holocene Epoch, and not before. Was agriculture not invented before then? Was it invented but could not be sustained? The same may also be true of some Holocene inventions of agriculture.
Let's take a closer look: Neolithic Revolution and Vavilov center and List of food origins and (PDF) Current perspectives and the future of domestication studies
Agriculture was invented in several places, with several different crop plants, and here are the places where the inventions were sustained to recent centuries. I have assembled the dates from several sources.
BP = Before Present taken to be 1950 Jan 1.
The Holocene Epoch is defined as the end of the Younger Dryas cold snap (12,900 to 11,700 BP), a brief return to ice-age conditions at the end of the Pleistocene Epoch. Younger Dryas impact hypothesis is a speculation on the cause of that event.
Let's take a closer look: Neolithic Revolution and Vavilov center and List of food origins and (PDF) Current perspectives and the future of domestication studies
Agriculture was invented in several places, with several different crop plants, and here are the places where the inventions were sustained to recent centuries. I have assembled the dates from several sources.
Where | When (BP) |
---|---|
(Holocene) | 11,650 - present |
Middle East | 12,000 |
India | 8,500 |
China | 11,500 |
New Guinea | 10,000 |
East Africa | 8,000 |
West Africa | 4,500 |
North America | 6,500 |
Central America | 10,000 |
Andes: South America | 10,000 |
Amazonia: South America | 9,000 |
BP = Before Present taken to be 1950 Jan 1.
The Holocene Epoch is defined as the end of the Younger Dryas cold snap (12,900 to 11,700 BP), a brief return to ice-age conditions at the end of the Pleistocene Epoch. Younger Dryas impact hypothesis is a speculation on the cause of that event.