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Timeline of agriculture and food technology

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Paleolithic

  • 30,600 BC – Pestle used as a tool in southern Italy to grind oats.[1]

Neolithic Revolution

Antiquity

  • 2600 BC – Large-scale commercial timbering of cedars in Phoenicia (Lebanon) for export to Egypt and Sumeria. Similar commercial timbering in South India.
  • 1700 BC – Wind powered machine developed by the Babylonians
  • 1500 BC – Seed drill in Babylonia
  • 1300 BC – Creation of canal linking the Nile delta to the Red Sea
  • 691 BC – First aqueduct (approx. 50 miles long) constructed to bring water to Nineveh.
  • 530 BC – Tunnel of Eupalinos first underground aqueduct
  • 500 BC – The moldboard iron plough is invented in China
  • 500 BC – Row cultivation of crops using intensive hoeing to weed and conserve moisture practised in China
  • 300 BC – Efficient trace harness for plowing invented in China
  • 200 BC – Efficient collar harness for plowing invented in China
  • 100 BC – Rotary winnowing fan invented in China
  • 100 BC – The multi-tube seed drill is invented in China
  • AD 200 – The fishing reel invented in China
  • 600 – The distillation of alcohol in China
  • 607 – The Chinese begin constructing a massive canal system to connect the Yellow and Yangtze rivers

.

Modern technological advances

Green Revolution

See also

References

  1. ^ [1] Multistep food plant processing at Grotta Paglicci (Southern Italy) around 32,600 cal B.P.
  2. ^ James Owen for National Geographic News (2008-08-06). "Stone Age Milk Use Began 2,000 Years Earlier".
  3. ^ Céide Fields. Archived 2012-05-01 at the Wayback Machine Visitor Centre Ballycastle, County Mayo, Ireland.
  4. ^ Mohar Singh and Hari D. Upadhyaya (2015). Genetic and Genomic Resources for Grain Cereals Improvement. Academic Press. ISBN 978-0128020005.
  5. ^ [Haneklaus, S., Lilienthal, H., Schnug, E., 2016. 25 years Precision Agriculture in Germany – a retrospective. Proceedings of the 13th International Conference on Precision Agriculture : July 31 – August 3, 2016, St. Louis, Missouri, USA.]
  6. ^ Hybrid rice for Food Security. Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations.
  7. ^ Moskin, Julia. (July 19, 2005). "Tattooed Fruit Is on Way". New York Times.