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Andrew Sherratt's model of a secondary products revolution involved a widespread and broadly contemporaneous set of innovations in Old World farming.The use of domestic animals for primary carcass products was broadened from the 4th–3rd millennia BCE (c. Middle Chalcolithic) to include exploitation for renewable 'secondary' products: milk, wool, traction (the use of animals to drag ploughs ...
Andrew George Sherratt (8 May 1946 – 24 February 2006) was an English archaeologist, one of the most influential of his generation. He was best known for his theory of the secondary products revolution .
Nomadic pastoralism seems to have developed first as a part of the secondary-products revolution proposed by Andrew Sherratt, in which early pre-pottery Neolithic cultures that had used animals as live meat ("on the hoof") also began using animals for their secondary products, for example: milk and its associated dairy products, wool and other ...
Another question arises about livestock farming: the use of animal “secondary products”. That is, those that do not involve the slaughter of livestock: milk from cows and goats, wool from sheep, goat hair. A. Sherratt has proposed that their exploitation only began in the 4th millennium BC (a “secondary products revolution”). [186]
Sam Altman says OpenAI's ChatGPT 4o is the "best search product on the web." Altman had a cheeky exchange Saturday with Aravind Srinivas, CEO of AI search startup Perplexity. Altman added that ...
Andrew Sherratt has argued that following upon the Neolithic Revolution was a second phase of discovery that he refers to as the secondary products revolution. Animals, it appears, were first domesticated purely as a source of meat. [ 102 ]
A 33-year-old man is facing charges with police saying he threatened to release Sarin gas during celebrity pastor Joel Osteen’s Christmas Eve megachurch service.. Houston Police Department ...
Federal law enforcement officers on Thursday search the home of Rhiannon Do, the 23-year-old daughter of Orange County Supervisor Andrew Do. (Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)