Guns, Germs, and Steel is a book by Jared Diamond that has been mention in passing on this forum before. It explores the question of why some civilizations progressed far more rapidly than others. I've not read the book, but National Geographic made a 3 part documentary out of it that has been showing up on cable the last couple months. I've seen it on at least two different stations, and it's very interesting. It's on right now on my PBS station, which prompted me to post about it.
You can search your local listings for it at www.tvguide.com or www.zap2it.com
If you don't want to or can't watch it, the cliff's notes version of his theory is that it boils down to the most nutritious food crops and best domesticated animals. He points out that of the 14 species of domesticated animals in the world, only the llama comes from the Americas. He also points out that the fertile crescent area had 4 different domesticated animals (cows, pigs, sheep, goats) and several excellent crops, and they thrived in areas with a similar climate/latitude (i.e. Europe)
Thus reinforcing the value of researching agriculture and animal husbandry. Be sure to secure your local resources.
You can search your local listings for it at www.tvguide.com or www.zap2it.com
If you don't want to or can't watch it, the cliff's notes version of his theory is that it boils down to the most nutritious food crops and best domesticated animals. He points out that of the 14 species of domesticated animals in the world, only the llama comes from the Americas. He also points out that the fertile crescent area had 4 different domesticated animals (cows, pigs, sheep, goats) and several excellent crops, and they thrived in areas with a similar climate/latitude (i.e. Europe)
Thus reinforcing the value of researching agriculture and animal husbandry. Be sure to secure your local resources.
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