Abstract
Paleobiolinguistics is used to determine when and where maize (Zea mays L.) developed significance for different prehistoric groups of Native America. Dates and locations of proto-languages for which maize terms reconstruct generally accord with crop-origin and dispersal information from plant genetics and archaeobotany. Paleobiolinguistic and other lines of evidence indicate that human interest in maize was extensive millennia before the widespread development of a villagefarming way of life in the New World. © 2014 Society of Ethnobiology.
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Brown, C. H., Clement, C. R., Epps, P., Luedeling, E., & Wichmann, S. (2014). The Paleobiolinguistics of Maize (Zea mays L.). Ethnobiology Letters, 5(1), 52–64. https://doi.org/10.14237/ebl.5.2014.130
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