Needs for a conceptual bridge between biological domestication and early food globalization

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Abstract

The past 15 y has seen much development in documentation of domestication of plants and animals as gradual traditions spanning millennia. There has also been considerable momentum in understanding the dispersals of major domesticated taxa across continents spanning thousands of miles. The two processes are often considered within different theoretical strains. What is missing from our repertoire of explanations is a conceptual bridge between the protracted process over millennia and the multiregional, globally dispersed nature of domestication. The evidence reviewed in this paper bears upon how we conceptualize domestication as an episode or a process. By bringing together the topics of crop domestication and crop movement, those complex, protracted, and continuous outcomes come more clearly into view.

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Liu, X., & Jones, M. (2024). Needs for a conceptual bridge between biological domestication and early food globalization. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 121(16). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2219055121

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