Old World globalization and the Columbian exchange: comparison and contrast[J] . Nicole Boivin,DorianQ Fuller,Alison Crowther.World Archaeology . 2012 (3)BOIVIN, N., D.Q. FULLER & A. CROWTHER. 2012. Old World globalization and the Columbian exchange: comparison and contrast. World Archaeology ...
World Trade and Biological Exchanges Before 1492 by John L. Sorenson, Carl L. Johannessen (review) The extent of, and the agencies behind, long-distance trade and crop translocations in the Old World prior to the Columbian Exchange has seen much revision and rethinking in recent years. Rather...
The Columbian Exchange has been described as "the most important event in history since the end of the Ice Age." This interchange of many species of fauna, flora, fowl, and fruits resulted in new encounters between New and Old World inhabitants. Prominent among these were manifestations of to...
Colombian Biological ExchangeMigrationEthnobiologyThe transfer of domesticated food plants between the Old World and New World is one of the great stories of human鈥損lant relations and has had a considerable impact on historical and economic interactions. Students rarely consider the role of these ...
Columbian exchangePeruSpainReconstructing past movement of an organism benefits from a diverse range of data.Transfer and introduction, two different processes, embody failures and successes.Human agency governs the transfer of domesticates, weeds, pests and parasites.Implantation of Spanish agriculture in...
E. 1992. Fauna, flora, fowl, and fruit: effects of the Columbian Exchange on the allergic response of New and Old World inhabitants. Allergy Proceedings 13(6), 335-44.Salvaggio, J.E., `Fauna, Flora, Fowl, and Fruit: Effects of the Columbian Exchange on the Allergic Response of New ...
Columbian Exchange, the largest part of a more general process of biological globalization that followed the transoceanic voyaging of the 15th and 16th centuries, particularly in the wake of Christopher Columbus’s voyages that began in 1492. It profound