Wednesday, 20 March 2019

An Important Group of European Hunter-Gatherers Taught Themselves To Farm

Some 12,000 years ago, the land was exceptionally fertile curving up from the Nile River basin across Jordan, Syria, and Iraq, down into the Tigris River Valley. The area’s earliest settlers grew wheat, barely and lentils. Some kept pigs and sheep. Farming soon replaced hunting and foraging as a way of life there. The region became known as the Fertile Crescent, the birthplace of agriculture. This pastoral lifestyle eventually spread across Europe from a place called Anatolia, which sits

from All DiscoverMagazine.com content http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/d-brief/?p=32884

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