ARCHAEOLOGY

LIKE WATER FOR WHEAT

People had successfully been growing millet on northern China’s Loess Plateau for thousands of years when wheat was introduced to the region from the Near East around 4,000 years ago. This new crop brought both challenges and opportunities. “The central

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from ARCHAEOLOGY

ARCHAEOLOGY1 min readPolitical Ideologies
Pompeian Politics
Many of the buildings along Pompeii’s streets are covered with painted messages extolling the virtues of candidates running for office nearly 2,000 years ago. “These graffiti played a similar role to our electoral posters, to get consensus and suppor
ARCHAEOLOGY2 min read
Kingdom Of Kaabu’s Secret Capital
Ensconced in the forested interior of modern-day Guinea-Bissau, the capital of the Kingdom of Kaabu, Kansala, was the region’s best-kept secret. Although far removed from major European trade routes, the city nevertheless dominated West Africa’s Sene
ARCHAEOLOGY2 min read
London On The Black Sea
The fourteenth-century Icelandic Edwardsaga chronicles the life of Edward the Confessor, the last Anglo-Saxon king of England (reigned 1042–1066). It also describes how, in the years after the Norman Conquest in 1066—when William the Conqueror invade

Related Books & Audiobooks