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  2. Three Sisters (agriculture) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_Sisters_(agriculture)

    The Three Sisters planting method is featured on the reverse of the 2009 US Sacagawea dollar. [1]Agricultural history in the Americas differed from the Old World in that the Americas lacked large-seeded, easily domesticated grains (such as wheat and barley) and large domesticated animals that could be used for agricultural labor.

  3. Taxonomy of wheat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taxonomy_of_wheat

    Genetic analysis has shown that the original hexaploid wheats were the result of a cross between a tetraploid domesticated wheat, such as T. dicoccum or T. durum, and a wild goatgrass, such as Ae. tauschii. [8] Polyploidy is important to wheat classification for three reasons: Wheats within one ploidy level will be more closely related to each ...

  4. Triticale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triticale

    Conventional plant breeding has helped establish triticale as a valuable crop, especially where conditions are less favourable for wheat cultivation. Triticale being a synthesized grain notwithstanding, many initial limitations, such as an inability to reproduce due to infertility and seed shrivelling, low yield and poor nutritional value, have ...

  5. Wheat berry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wheat_berry

    A wheat berry, or wheatberry, is a whole wheat kernel, composed of the bran, germ, and endosperm, without the husk. [1] Botanically, it is a type of fruit called a caryopsis . [ 2 ] Wheat berries are eaten as a grain, have a tan to reddish-brown color, and can vary in gluten and protein content from 6–9% ("soft") to 10–14% ("hard").

  6. Wheat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wheat

    The origins of formal wheat breeding lie in the nineteenth century, when single line varieties were created through selection of seed from a single plant noted to have desired properties. Modern wheat breeding developed in the first years of the twentieth century and was closely linked to the development of Mendelian genetics. The standard ...

  7. Genetically modified wheat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genetically_modified_wheat

    Wheat is a natural hybrid derived from interspecies breeding. It is theorized that wheat's ancestors ( Triticum monococcum , Aegilops speltoides , and Aegilops tauschii , all diploid grasses) hybridized naturally over millennia somewhere in West Asia, to create natural polyploid hybrids, the best known of which are common wheat and durum wheat .

  8. List of Canadian heritage wheat varieties - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Canadian_heritage...

    A friend of his sent him seed from Glasgow in 1842. It is a good yielding wheat, high in quality; an excellent milling wheat. It was grown in Canada from 1860 to 1900, and was the industry standard. Ladoga, 1888. A variety originally from Russia. Early maturing, and the parent of Preston and Stanley. Hard Red Calcutta, 1890. A variety from ...

  9. William Farrer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Farrer

    Nina Farrer (1848–1929). Farrer was born on 3 April 1845 in the town of Docker, Westmorland in the English north west (now Cumbria).The son of Thomas Farrer, a tenant farmer, and his wife Sarah William, William Farrer was selected for a scholarship at Christ's Hospital, London where he was awarded a gold and silver medal for mathematics and soon earned a scholarship to Pembroke College where ...