enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Timeline of agriculture and food technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_agriculture...

    6001 BC – Archaeological evidence from various sites on the Iberian Peninsula suggest the domestication of plants and animals. 6000 BC – Granary built in Mehrgarh for storage of excess food. 5500 BC – Céide Fields in Ireland are the oldest known field systems in the world, this landscape consists of extensive tracts of land enclosed by ...

  3. Food storage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Food_storage

    A food storage calculator can be used to help determine how much of these staple foods a person would need to store in order to sustain life for one full year. In addition to storing the basic food items many people choose to supplement their food storage with frozen or preserved garden-grown fruits and vegetables and freeze-dried or canned ...

  4. Postharvest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Postharvest

    It has direct applications to postharvest handling in establishing the storage and transport conditions that best prolong shelf life. An example of the importance of the field to post-harvest handling is the discovery that ripening of fruit can be delayed, and thus their storage prolonged, by preventing fruit tissue respiration.

  5. Food system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Food_system

    The term food system describes the interconnected systems and processes that influence nutrition, food, health, community development, and agriculture.A food system includes all processes and infrastructure involved in feeding a population: growing, harvesting, processing, packaging, transporting, marketing, consumption, distribution, and disposal of food and food-related items.

  6. Tuber - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuber

    The tuber is produced in one growing season and used to perennate the plant and as a means of propagation. When fall comes, the above-ground structure of the plant dies, but the tubers survive underground over winter until spring, when they regenerate new shoots that use the stored food in the tuber to grow.

  7. Ecological pyramid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecological_pyramid

    Ecological pyramids begin with producers on the bottom (such as plants) and proceed through the various trophic levels (such as herbivores that eat plants, then carnivores that eat flesh, then omnivores that eat both plants and flesh, and so on). The highest level is the top of the food chain. Biomass can be measured by a bomb calorimeter.

  8. Storage organ - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Storage_organ

    Plants that have an underground storage organ are called geophytes in the Raunkiær plant life-form classification system. [2] [3] Storage organs often, but not always, act as perennating organs which enable plants to survive adverse conditions (such as cold, excessive heat, lack of light or drought).

  9. Food storage container - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Food_storage_container

    Wherever food is harvested, manufactured or distributed there is a need for containers to enable the food to travel securely and in good condition to the shop, warehouse or distribution depot. For many foods, especially those in their own individual containers such as canned vegetables, the common container is the corrugated fiberboard box ...