A Conversation for The Mystery of the Sweet Potato
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saranoh - good girl gone Essex Started conversation Jun 11, 2004
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Sorry, but references please!
That's a pretty important statement to make without any further reading to back it up.
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MotDoc, Temporarily Exiled to Tartu, Estonia Posted Jun 12, 2004
There is ample further reading listed at the bottom of the entry. I will provide specific references for individual facts if it is necessary.
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flyingtwinkle Posted Jun 12, 2004
sweet potato perhaps is a global phenomenoncosins having same root grew quickly all over simultaneously
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flyingtwinkle Posted Jun 12, 2004
sweet potato perhaps is a global phenomenon and its cousins having same root grew quickly all over simultaneously
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MotDoc, Temporarily Exiled to Tartu, Estonia Posted Jun 13, 2004
Sweet potato is not a global phenomena...the first European explorers in South America had never seen one before and called it Potato after one of the native names, batata. Later historians looking over the accounts of the first explorers figured out that those in Polynesia and South America were describing the same plant.
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MotDoc, Temporarily Exiled to Tartu, Estonia Posted Jun 13, 2004
Hey, if you or anyone else is interested you can check out the full text of my research at http://www.focusanthro.com/. I imagine it should be easy to find.
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Delicia - The world's acutest kitten Posted Jun 14, 2004
Cotton is another plant that crossed oceans in prehistoric times, apparently originiating in Africa, it reached Asia, where the socalled old-world-species G. herbaceum und G. arboreum grow, then somehow came to America, forming the new-world-species G. hirsutum, G. barbadense.
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MotDoc, Temporarily Exiled to Tartu, Estonia Posted Jun 14, 2004
Cotton is another question. There is legitimate evidence that Cotton's widespread natural range is the result of its ancient origins, in that it spread across the globe before the breaking apart of the continents.
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Delicia - The world's acutest kitten Posted Jun 15, 2004
Really? I knew sugar cane was mesozoic, but cotton i thought had migrated with people. Rather liked the idea.
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MotDoc, Temporarily Exiled to Tartu, Estonia Posted Jun 17, 2004
I don't remember the specific details on this one, but the fact that it has managed to differentiate into so many species by the present day indicates a more distant origin than the 10 kya when the first humans reached the Americas. I can look into it with more detail.
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- 1: saranoh - good girl gone Essex (Jun 11, 2004)
- 2: MotDoc, Temporarily Exiled to Tartu, Estonia (Jun 12, 2004)
- 3: flyingtwinkle (Jun 12, 2004)
- 4: flyingtwinkle (Jun 12, 2004)
- 5: MotDoc, Temporarily Exiled to Tartu, Estonia (Jun 13, 2004)
- 6: flyingtwinkle (Jun 13, 2004)
- 7: MotDoc, Temporarily Exiled to Tartu, Estonia (Jun 13, 2004)
- 8: Delicia - The world's acutest kitten (Jun 14, 2004)
- 9: MotDoc, Temporarily Exiled to Tartu, Estonia (Jun 14, 2004)
- 10: Delicia - The world's acutest kitten (Jun 15, 2004)
- 11: MotDoc, Temporarily Exiled to Tartu, Estonia (Jun 17, 2004)
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