Chapter 7 -New World Grains. The New World has provided only one major domesticated cereal, corn (Zea mays). Corn has the advantage of:

Similar documents
Perennial- Any plant that lives for more than 2 growing seasons. All trees and shrubs are perennials.

Ethnobotany. Lecture 4

GRAINS AND LEGUMES OF THE WORLD

The genus Citrus arose from Southeast Asia, but cultivated citrus fruits are derived from species native to India, China and Myanmar (Burma).

Chapter 9-Foods from Stems and Leaves

THE COLUMBIAN EXCHANGE

The Native American Experience

Amaranth Grain as a Cash Crop for Export from Nepal

Europe- 2. How did the nobles in Europe gain their wealth?

Evolution of Crops. Audrey Darrigues. H&CS830 Dr. David Tay Autumn 2003

Instructor: Stephen L. Love Aberdeen R & E Center 1693 S 2700 W Aberdeen, ID Phone: Fax:

Growing Quinoa in the Willamette Valley. Heather Stoven OSU Extension Horticulture

YIELD POTENTIAL OF NOVEL SEMI-DWARF GRAIN AMARANTHS TESTED FOR TENNESSEE GROWING CONDITIONS

Score / Name: P: CHAPTER 1 BELLWORK

HNU 145 Types and Uses of Cereals Grains & Pasta. Chapters 16 February 23, 2016

9/12/16. Lesson 2-1 Notes: Early People

Section 1. Objectives

Grains. Definition: single, hard seed Most common grains. Wheat Corn Rice

Scope of Specialty corn for Income generation Introduction

Competition for a Continent Why did early French and English efforts at colonization falter?

February 10, Study Guide

AMARANTH, CHIA, CHOCOLATE AND THE AZTEC. Vanderbilt Center for Latin American Studies Professional Development Workshop: September 7, 2017

December 11, Study Guide

Cortes and Pizarro, Columbian Exchange, and Colonial Empires

AMARANTH. (Amaranthus spp.) enabling deployment of underutilized species. Global Facilitation Unit. for Underutilized Species

The Stone Ages and Early Cultures 5,000,000 years ago 5,000 years ago

Three Sisters Cropping System

The legume family is second only to the grass family in terms of its importance to human nutrition.

Unit: Civilizations in the Americas

GENETICS AND EVOLUTION OF CORN. This activity previews basic concepts of inheritance and how species change over time.

Grains of the World Journal

1. Quinoa is Incredibly Nutritious

Slide 1. Slide 2. Slide 3

Peanuts were cultivated throughout warm regions of South America by the time Columbus reached the New World.

My Name: Customize your Corny by coloring it with your favorite colors.

Page 1 of 5.

food staple 1 of 6 staple food

Aztec and Inca Review

Sustainable Sweet Corn Production?

ewellness magazine 10 Facts about popcorn you should to know Facts about popcorn you should to know Wellness magazine

Ancient Mayans. KP Classroom

SSWH8 The student will demonstrate an understanding of the development of societies in Central and South America.

THREE WORLDS MEET CHAPTER 1 SECTION 1: PEOPLING THE AMERICAS SECTION 2: NORTH AMERICAN SOCIETIES AROUND Mitten CSHS AMAZ History Semester 1

THE GRASSES CHAPTER CHAPTER OUTLINE KEY CONCEPTS

Development and Distribution of Food Applications

Snack idea: Serve a small bowl of cherry tomatoes for a delicious snack. They go great with a low fat dip or a cheese stick!

Plain Local 5 th Grade Social Studies SLO

Early Civilizations of Middle America. Chapter 2, Section 1

Lesson 1: The Voyages of Columbus

Kentucky s Grain Farmers proudly present

Carrot Trial 2014 Elkus Test Garden

Lesson 1: Migration to the Americas

Gary Guittard President/Chairman Guittard Chocolate Company

THE COLUMBIAN EXCHANGE Can you imagine life today without orange juice, without milk, without bread, and without hamburgers? If you lived in Florida

Ancient grains: Opportunities for amaranth, quinoa, millet, sorghum and teff in gluten-free products

Food is usually stored as carbohydrate which gives higher caloric values than aerial stems and leaves.

PART I: WHAT IS RICE HISTORY & PRODUCTION

EARLY AMERICAS. Ice age and the Olmec

Mexican History and Systems of Empire

hapter 3 Lesson 1: The Earliest Texan

Early People in the Central American Land Bridge James Folta

North American Native Americans

2.1 Why and how did humans first come to north America?

lesson 1: what is rice?

The World before the Opening of the Atlantic BEGINNINGS 1500

Published Radio Scripts

The Columbian Exchange and Global Trade

Maize Days Week of November 7-11

Study Guide- Age of Exploration

Where does your food come from?

Effect of Germination on Proximate Composition of Two Maize Cultivars

Pomegranates, Punica granatum (Puniaceae) are subtropicalfruits native to the region from Iran to the Himalayas.

Elk Mound Seed. Company Introduction

IT S AS EASY AS THAT. They learn from watching you. Eat fruits and vegetables and the kids will, too. University of Nevada Cooperative Extension

ARTIFACT A ARTIFACT B

Name Period. Maya, Aztec & Inca Civilizations Latin America Notes. The Maya

Name: Date: Period: Chapter 11 Reading Guide The Americas on the Eve of Invasion p

Chapter 4: How and Why Europeans Came to the New World

EQ: How did the Age of Exploration lead to the colonization of North Carolina? Warm Up: Get your NOTEBOOK and copy down the EQ before class begins.

Sweet Corn. Cornucopia of Leftovers Starting with Sweet Corn. What will we learn today? Commonly asked questions. we eat it as a vegetable

Clash of Cultures: Two Worlds Collide By UShistory.org 2017

Corn: Zea Mays, family poaceae, commonly known as Maize.

The First People. The Big Idea Prehistoric people learned to adapt to their environment, to make simple tools, to use fire, and to use language.

Corn Growth and Development

Natives & Europeans Collide Study Guide

The Americans (Reconstruction to the 21st Century)

Popped Secret: The Mysterious Origin of Corn

Nutrition News. JR Lowell Elementary School Parent and Child Newsletter January 2008 Volume 1, Issue 1

Georgia. The Land And Its Early People. and the American Experience Chapter 3: Study Presentation

Sukun, sa-ke, buen pan, masapan, kamansi, Pana, Friyapen, Seema Chakka, Banbukeyo, Uto, Yaca, Lemai, Rimas.

About Us. Our Products

ANT 202 Monday November 10, 2014 XI. The Early Farming Adaptation in North America A. Basic Concepts 1. Terms 2. Origins B.

Short Film Popped Secret: The Mysterious Origin of Corn Educator Materials IN-DEPTH FILM GUIDE

Christopher Columbus Didn't Discover the New World; he Rediscovered it

Plantations in the Americas THE EARLY MODERN WORLD ( )

Chapter 3 Colonies Take Root ( )

the scientific name for us as a species Homo sapiens

Creating innovative production facilities for deep processing of amaranth grain

The Beginnings of Our Global Age: Europe and the Americas

Angiosperms. Seeded. Gymnosperms. Tracheophytes (vascular plants) Ferns Club mosses. Seedless. Fresh water alga. Mosses Hornworts

Transcription:

Chapter 7 -New World Grains The New World has provided only one major domesticated cereal, corn (Zea mays). Corn has the advantage of: Corn paired with beans formed the basis of all the major New World civilizations (the Maya, Aztec and Inca). Modern corn is morphologically different from wild grasses: -a few large stalks or culms -each culm is terminated by a tassel of male flowers -female flowers are tightly packed together and form an ear -the ear of domesticated corn is very large

Morphology of the Corn Plant Modern corn is a direct result of human selection from an annual species of Mexican teosinte. Teosinte (Zea mays subsp. parviglumis) is the closest wild relative of cultivated corn,zea mays subsp. mays. Zea mays subspecies mays Zea mays subspecies parviglumis Corn was initially domesticated in southern Mexico. Phytoliths found in Mexico show that corn was cultivated almost 9000 years ago. Direct evidence of domestication consists of small charred ears from dry pre-columbian cave deposits near Tehuacan, east of Mexico City ( 4700 years old). By Columbus s arrival in 1492, there were 3000 (YES! 3000!) locally selected varieties (land races) grown from Canada to South America.

Under the influence of continued human selection, corn acquired several features that reflect the dependency on humans. -selection for absence of dormancy which allowed 100% germination of seeds annually -enclosure of the female inflorescence or ear in layers of leaves or shucks As corn spread into North and South America, other changes to the plant occurred. In Mexico, two lines of selection led to kernels that protruded from the cupule.

The selection of these traits led to: Another mutation was the loss of sensitivity to photoperiod which allowed the spread of corn into temperate regions. Thousands of corn cultivars exist. Pod, dent, flint, pop, flour and sweet corn are the six main historical types of corn. European settlers in the U.S. grew flint and dent corn, but in 1812 two varieties were crossed. This hybrid is the ancestor of modern Corn Belt dent corn. Multiple hybridizations and selection in the 1930 s led to sweet eating corn and high-yield field corn. Columbus took corn back to Europe, but it was less popular in Europe. Europeans believed that ground corn had limited use in comparison to other grains.

Native Americans used a process called nixtamalization to: Nixtamalization is treating corn kernels with slaked lime (calcium hydroxide). Corn does not have the same nutritional value as many other whole grains. Corn is deficient in tryptophan and lysine, and relatively low in protein. A diet high in untreated corn can lead to a niacin and tryptophan deficiency and the disease pellagra. Pellagra is characterized by the three D s (dermitis, diarrhea and dementia). The health problem of pellagra was addressed in 1914 when yeast was added the diet. Native Americans did not suffer from pellagra because the nixtamalization made the niacin in corn more available.

New World Grains Wild rice, Zizania palustris, is a New World species used as a source of grain by Native Americans. The inflorescences of wild rice shatter. The grain was traditionally collected by beating mature inflorescences while they were held over the canoes. The grain was roasted, poured into deerskin-lined pits and trampled to remove the husks. Ojibwa wild rice pouch, cedar bark, American Museum of Natural History Wild rice cultivation in the U.S. began in 1959. In the 1970 s, plant breeders selected a non-shattering strain that improved yield from 100 to 700 pounds.

New World Grains Amaranth and quinoa are not members of the grass family. Species of amaranth (Amaranthus; Amaranthaceae) were cultivated by native peoples of Mexico, Guatemala and Peru. The seeds are high in protein, (30% higher than rice), with the essential amino acid lysine. It has been suggested that amaranth made up 80% of the caloric intake of Aztecs in Mexico before the Spanish conquest. Aztecs also used amaranth for religious ceremonies. The Spanish forbade the cultivation of the crop which led to the disappearance this important food source in Mexico for several hundred years. Amaranth seeds also contain saponins, oxalates and phenols that must be removed before consumption. Another member of the Amaranthaceae is quinoa, Chenopodium quinoa. Native people in the New World domesticated three species of Chenopodium. Only the South American species Chenopodium quinoa is still cultivated.

New World Grains Evidence of use of wild quinoa dates to more than 7000 ybp. Fossil fruits were uncovered on the southern edge of Lake Titicaca in Bolivia and showed domestication at least 4000 ybp. The distinctive appearance and texture of wild quinoa are because the embryo in the seed surrounds the endosperm.

Study outline-chapter 7-New World Grains Name the only major domesticated cereal from the New World. What are the main advantages of corn? What food pairings formed the basis of all the major New World civilizations? How is modern corn morphologically different from wild grasses? What is the closest wild relative of cultivated corn? What are the main differences between teosinte and modern corn? Where was corn initially domesticated? What types of archeological evidence is linked to the domestication of corn? Under the influence of continued human selection, corn acquired which features? The selection of which 2 traits produced the flint corns and gourd-seed, shoe-peg and dent corns? What were the regions of domestication for the flint corn, and the gourd-seed, shoe-peg and dent corns, respectively? Which mutation allowed the spread of corn into temperate regions? What is nixtamalization? What were the benefits of nixtamalization? What is pellagra? Why was pellagra uncommon in Native American populations? What are the 4 New World grains? Wild rice (Zizania palustris) Know origin/history and information about cultivation/domestication and uses. Amaranth (Amaranthus spp.) Know origin/history and information about cultivation/domestication and uses. Quinoa (Chenopodium quinoa) Know origin/history and information about cultivation/domestication and uses.