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starchless ancestors?

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Having a long-standing interest in ethnobotany and the origins of

agriculture, I am suprised at the thought that starch eating is new..

In fact, grinding stones are over 100,000 years old and predate most

other " modern " technologies around the world.

Also, I was just reading " Rocky Mountain Wildflowers " to find native

edible flowers for my cheese making cows.Contrary to my education,there

are half a dozen root crops listed that were documented (by and

among other contemporary accounts) as a chief source of calories

for Rocky Mounatin and high plains " natives " . They were harvested in

great quantities, fermented and dried into loaves weighing 5 lbs or

more and consumed year round. So much for berries, greens and meats.

Comments?

Meg

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Hi Meg:

This is not a comment, but rather an addition.

The Britannica says " wheat is believed to have been milled 75,000 years

ago. " It doesn't say where nor if it was cultivated or wild (probably

at the time it was wild).

So there you are. So maybe there is something rotten in the kingdom of

Denmark.

Cheers,

José

--- In , " megcattell " <mcattell@a...>

wrote:

> Having a long-standing interest in ethnobotany and the origins of

> agriculture, I am suprised at the thought that starch eating is new..

> In fact, grinding stones are over 100,000 years old and predate most

> other " modern " technologies around the world.

>

> Also, I was just reading " Rocky Mountain Wildflowers " to find native

> edible flowers for my cheese making cows.Contrary to my

education,there

> are half a dozen root crops listed that were documented (by and

> among other contemporary accounts) as a chief source of

calories

> for Rocky Mounatin and high plains " natives " . They were harvested in

> great quantities, fermented and dried into loaves weighing 5 lbs or

> more and consumed year round. So much for berries, greens and meats.

>

> Comments?

>

> Meg

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>Also, I was just reading " Rocky Mountain Wildflowers " to find native

>edible flowers for my cheese making cows.Contrary to my education,there

>are half a dozen root crops listed that were documented (by and

> among other contemporary accounts) as a chief source of calories

>for Rocky Mounatin and high plains " natives " . They were harvested in

>great quantities, fermented and dried into loaves weighing 5 lbs or

>more and consumed year round. So much for berries, greens and meats.

>

>Comments?

>

>Meg

Oh, I agree and I've said about the same for a long time.

Ditto for the idea that fruits in the past were " low sugar " .

You don't need technology to get starches and sugars

year round. The natives in Brazil harvested manioc, the

natives in Hawaii harvested taro, and the aborigines

in Australia had yams. Some of the low-carb books have

popularized the notion that early humans didn't eat

starches/sugars much but I don't know where they got that.

Actually if you go WAY back, our primate ancestors ate

MOSTLY carbs with little protein. The Paleo folks ate

a lot of meat, but they had vegies too.

To get grain in large quantity goes hand

in hand with " civilization " though, so the grain crops ARE newer

and it's the invention of the grain combine that started

making them really cheap. Rice might be an exception

in this regard: I think the Asians have had large rice paddies

for a long long time.

Heidi Jean

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> Having a long-standing interest in ethnobotany and the origins of

> agriculture, I am suprised at the thought that starch eating is new..

> In fact, grinding stones are over 100,000 years old and predate most

> other " modern " technologies around the world.

>

> Also, I was just reading " Rocky Mountain Wildflowers " to find native

> edible flowers for my cheese making cows.Contrary to my education,there

> are half a dozen root crops listed that were documented (by and

> among other contemporary accounts) as a chief source of calories

> for Rocky Mounatin and high plains " natives " . They were harvested in

> great quantities, fermented and dried into loaves weighing 5 lbs or

> more and consumed year round. So much for berries, greens and meats.

>

> Comments?

>

> Meg

Meg,

This is the first fermentation I've heard of on this continent pre contact

in a hunter-gatherer, non -agriculturist tribe. What I'm familiar with is

the Northeast, that was fully forested. Greens would have been more seasonal

and rarer than berries that could be dried. Acorn, cattail flours,

groundnuts, a small edible tuber, inner tree barks, cattail and pond lily

roots are the starches I know of. Have said here root starch eating is pre

agriculture.

Wanita

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