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How Do You Think The Domestication Of Wild Animals And Plants Is Tied

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THE DOMESTICATION OF ANIMALS

Periodical of Anthropological Research

Vol. 68, No. 2 (Summer 2012)

, pp. 161-190 (thirty pages)

Published By: The University of Chicago Press

Journal of Anthropological Research

https://www. jstor .org/stable/23264664

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Abstract

Over the by 11,000 years humans accept brought a wide variety of animals under domestication. Domestic animals belong to all Linnaean animate being classes—mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, fish, insects, and even, arguably, bacteria. Raised for food, secondary products, labor, and companionship, domestic animals have become intricately woven into man economic system, society, and religion. Animal domestication is an on-going process, as humans, with increasingly sophisticated technology for breeding and rearing animals in captivity, go on to bring more and more species under their control. Understanding the process of animal domestication and its reciprocal impacts on humans and animal domesticates requires a multidisciplinary approach. This paper brings together recent research in archaeology, genetics, and animal sciences in a word of the process of domestication, its impact on animal domesticates, and the various pathways humans and their creature partners take followed into domestication.

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Electric current issues are now on the Chicago Journals website. Read the latest issue.The Journal of Anthropological Researchis published in the interest of full general anthropology. It was founded by Leslie Spier in 1945 as the Southwestern Periodical of Anthropology. JAR publishes substantive, peer-reviewed research manufactures and volume reviews in all subfields of anthropology, totaling approximately half-dozen hundred pages of text annually. It sponsors and publishes the JAR Distinguished Lectures by leading scholars in the subject. JAR is an independent, non-profit medium for the dissemination of significant, theoretically informed, broadly contextualized research results of interest to the international profession of anthropology. It has over one k subscribers worldwide. Institutions may receive JAR electronically for a modest fee in improver to the hard-re-create subscription.

Publisher Data

Since its origins in 1890 as one of the 3 main divisions of the University of Chicago, The Academy of Chicago Press has embraced as its mission the obligation to disseminate scholarship of the highest standard and to publish serious works that promote education, foster public agreement, and enrich cultural life. Today, the Journals Division publishes more than seventy journals and hardcover serials, in a wide range of bookish disciplines, including the social sciences, the humanities, education, the biological and medical sciences, and the physical sciences.

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Periodical of Anthropological Research © 2012 The University of Chicago Press

Source: https://www.jstor.org/stable/23264664

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