Domestication Essays

  • Essay On Domestication

    2782 Words  | 6 Pages

    The reasons behind the domestication of animals and plants by humans are numerous and the dates of the original domestication event for each species are highly differentiated. In understanding the jump to domestication, which likely began at the end of the Pleistocene era roughly 12,000 years ago, it is important to look at the changes in human lifestyle during that time. This time period was marked by an unpredictable climate (Diamond, 2002). The changes in the environment meant that the growth

  • Domestication Research Paper

    576 Words  | 2 Pages

    Domestication has significantly changed the evolution of human responsibility by designating areas of land, and training the fauna to fit our new agricultural way of life. Fauna such as dogs, sheep, pigs, cows, horses and more, have been fundamentally transformed by humans to make our lives better. In the beginning, hunters and gathers foraged for flora and fauna only for food. In time, they began to understand that flora and fauna can be useful for labor, clothing, and protection as well as to

  • Domestication Of Cats Essay

    909 Words  | 2 Pages

    Genetics Behind the Domestication of Cats Cats have been companions for over 10,000 years and it had lead scientist to believe they domesticated themselves unknowingly from the beginning. Many scientists believe cats inherited certain genetic mutations from ancestors who weren’t afraid of humans. There is a study that identified some of the genes that could be responsible for the change between house cats and their wild ancestors. It appears that the change from feral to domestic had to do with

  • Cattle Domestication Essay

    789 Words  | 2 Pages

    Domestication of cattle occurred in two regions, the Near East and the Indian subcontinent around 10,500 BP. Taurine (Bos taurus), domesticated in the Near east, has been found to be connected to an original group of as small as 80 aurchos. (Bollongino, 2012). B. taurus (identify these cattle) These animals are very different than modern day domesticated cattle and did not exhibit some of the features of those modern cattle do such as smaller size and docile behavior. This in turn made the domestication

  • Animal Domestication Essay

    1535 Words  | 4 Pages

    Animal domestication has influenced history and has had a positive impact on people of the past. Domestication can be understood as the process in which animal species have come into contact with people and has greatly changed how the animals live. Animal domestication didn’t just happen overnight; it was a complex progression that took many years. Domestication caused social, political, cultural and economic changes (Mammals and humans: Domestication and Commensals). The dog (Canis lupus f. familiaris)

  • Domestic Animals and the Land Ethic: A Response to J. Baird Callicott

    3017 Words  | 7 Pages

    Peter Singer seem to ignore a fundamental defining characteristic of animals, namely their level of domestication. These two essays’ assumptions and exclusions inspired me to think more about domestication. Partially through the process of brainstorming and outlining my arguments, I read “Animal Liberation: A Triangular Affair” by J. Baird Callicott, which at the very least dealt with domestication, but I found that his version of the land ethic dealt with wild animals better than with domesticated

  • Guns Germs Steel

    1357 Words  | 3 Pages

    two main arguments that will become crucial to his thesis later on in the book. First, he goes in depth about mass extermination and further extinction of large mammals that occurred in New Guinea and Australia which were important for food and domestication, and secondly he argues that all the first civilized peoples in the world each had the ability to out develop one another, but were hindered or helped by their environment. Diamond continues to provide evidence for his thesis that environmental

  • The Agricultural Revolution And The Agricultural Revolution

    900 Words  | 2 Pages

    life and settlement. The significant adaptation of the people in Neolithic era was agricultural and domestication, which is known as Neolithic Revolution or the Agricultural Revolution. This transformation of early human society was largely influence by the warmest climate and the rapid population growth. The Agricultural Revolution caused humans to settle, leading to farming, animal domestication, and the creation of civilizations. The

  • Essay On Animism

    2823 Words  | 6 Pages

    III. Slash and Burn Agriculture Slash and Burn Agriculture is a widely used method of cultivating crops in usually temperate or tropical regions. It is the process which forested land is clear cut and any remaining vegetation is burned, the ash remains contain a nutrient rich top soil that helps fertilize crops. After years of cultivation the fertility of the soil decline and weeds increase, causing the farmers to shift to a new plot. Traditionally the old plot was left uncultivated, reverting itself

  • The Origin of Food Production

    2421 Words  | 5 Pages

    foraging and hunting, which were conducted without any significant recourse to the domestication of either food source (Fagan 2007: 129). Food production is presumed to have emerged approximately 12,000 years ago as a system of “deliberate cultivation of cereal grasses, edible root plants, and animal domestication” (Fagan 2007: 126). The pronounced change from hunting and gathering to agriculture and domestication can be simplistically designated the Agricultural or Neolithic Revolution (Pringle

  • Is It Easy to Live in Harmony with a House Cat?

    590 Words  | 2 Pages

    someone’s lap, when in actuality these sweet creatures are not genetically far off from wild voracious hunters. According to Bradshaw (2013), over 10,000 years ago, humans began farming and building granaries to store grain, which triggered the self-domestication of the house mouse (granaries provided excellent shelter and food source). Feral cats naturally adapted to living close by human communities attracted to the increasing mouse population in the granaries. The cat’s wild behavior of hunting became

  • Domesticated Wolf Research Paper

    719 Words  | 2 Pages

    hard to determine the real source where dogs came from but there are two top leading theories as to how the domestication of wolves began. The top leading theory is wolves domesticated themselves to take advantage of human settlements; wolves no longer had to hunt for food when humans gave it directly. The next leading theory is human isolated wolves as pups to raise them in domestication. These domesticated clans then reproduced and became the era of domesticated dogs. There are different viewings

  • Guns, Germs, and Steel, by Jared Diamond

    1344 Words  | 3 Pages

    After reading Guns, Germs, and Steel, the five main points are domestication of plants and animals, food production, government, innovation, and germs. The domestication of plants and animals helped determine a society's supply of food. First of all, there is the domestication of plants. Domesticated plants were used for food, clothing, and traction. There is about 200,000 wild plant species, but human only eat only a few thousands of those wild plant species, and on top of that, only a few hundred

  • In Praise of Jared Diamond's Guns, Germs, and Steel

    1016 Words  | 3 Pages

    well-being or virtue. He's just curious about the global distribution of bling bling. Diamond's hypothesis is that geography gave certain groups big initial advantages. Specifically, some places are more conducive to domestication of plants and animals. Most people think that domestication is just a matter of capturing animals and breeding them in captivity. This is a misconception. Domesticated species of plants and animals have undergone major genetic changes through years of selective breeding. Compared

  • Hunter-Gatherer Population Effects

    2659 Words  | 6 Pages

    At some point in time, human populations decided to settle down and harvest their own food instead of searching for it in the woods. In modern times, people tend to view this as a great advancement or revolution. Why would people want to search for food daily and forage for tubers or berries when they could just head to the supermarket or their own backyard? Scientist have determined, however, that this development brought many negative effects to the human population. The societies who adopted agriculture

  • Guns Germs And Steel Book Report

    1372 Words  | 3 Pages

    Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies by Jared Diamond In 1972 while Jared Diamond, a biology professor from UCLA, was in New Guinea conducting research on tropical birds, he met a local politician named Yali. Yali started the conversation by questioning Diamond on goods brought to New Guinea from Europeans such as steel, food or clothing. He then proposed a question to the American professor regarding the comparison between the two countries. Yali asked, “Why is it that your white

  • Domestication Of The Media

    2321 Words  | 5 Pages

    Domestication: A tool for understanding media The umbrella term of ‘media’ encompasses the methods of interpersonal communication, examples of which range from television programs and newspapers to blogs on the Internet. The fast paced, constant evolution of the media makes it difficult to define and comprehend, but as the media itself evolves, concepts attempting to explain and control the media emerge, such as the concept of domestication. The concept aims to explain how individuals and societies

  • The Domestication of Dogs

    837 Words  | 2 Pages

    Domestication of Dogs Humans know dogs as a sweet and loving animal that wants to be loved, or also a man’s best friend, but until they were domesticated, they weren’t always like that. Even though many people think that the dogs were domesticated from wolves, not many people truly knows what kind of wolf that the dogs domesticated from. Researchers think that the gray wolf is the primary target of the domestication of dogs. The scientists believe that the dog comes from the gray wolf and the dogs

  • Origins of Agriculture: the stepping stone for civilization

    1432 Words  | 3 Pages

    Most people do not think highly of the farmer and of agriculture in general. After all, there is no "visible" connection between the rural and the urban life. As long as the food is on the table or in the market, agriculture is simply not important to most people. However, not that many people think that school, sports, movies, and society would not be possible without agriculture. Agriculture was a crucial science that gave rise to the earliest of settlements and allowed humans to grow. Agriculture

  • Jared Diamond Global Inequity

    742 Words  | 2 Pages

    countries such as Europe, but not effective in countries such as Egypt? All in all, the reason for this is due to the natural geographic disadvantages Egypt had dealt with in comparison to Europe. These two countries differ in plant and animal domestication, and also size as well as population. In addition to that, the terrain and environment of different regions throughout the world have a major impact on the success of civilizations. Egypt is a country located in Northwestern Africa which sits