Anth, 6 Feb 2002
In addition to the long list of reasons my life sucks this week, I was late to class and my brain is still thawing from the cold. Only 9 more shopping days until Half-Price Chocolate Day!
More on Sedentary (Neolithic) life:
plants
animals:
Goat uses:
Cow and horse:
blood - food source
New World grain crop availability:
What is Domestication?
How did they figure thiese things out?
moving onto
-- pop quiz on reading --
Communication:
bureaucratese:
jargon:
inflated language:
Indirect communication (article):
More on Sedentary (Neolithic) life:
plants
- cereal grains = carbohydrates, but not protein
- fossil record: dental, skeletal: teeth weak, skeletons brittle, shorter
- pulses: (bean, peas) high protein plants
- Mesopotamia: wild cereal grains, some pulses
animals:
- img of 10
- Mesopotamia:
- oxen,
- cattle,
- goats,
- sheep,
- eventually pigs and horses
- oxen,
- milk,
- meat,
- wool,
- labour (small carts)
- breed in captivity
- horse milk
- pack animals
- dung ->
- fertilizer,
- fuel,
- building material
- grass-eaters' dung less dangerous
- fertilizer,
- New World animal availability:
- llamas,
- bees,
- ducks
- llamas,
- corn
- required much cultivation to make it a food source
- original maize (grass) plant cobs were less than an inch long
- selectively bred up to 4-5" and only about half kernels.
- seems to have started in Valley of Mexico, outside Tenochitilan (sp)
What is Domestication?
- breed in captivity
- husbandry : desirable trais encouraged
- maize: gather seeds from plants with larger cobs, more kernels (higher yield)
- cattle: biggest, strongest for labour, extra milk for milking
- sheep: more wool coverage
- Engineering food resources is process of domestication
- out of 200,000 plants we have specialized on 12 for most of our food
- out of all animals we have specialized in about 10 (back to img)
- now we are genengineering animals and plants hybrids -> (mule) don't reproduce...
- grain seeds resist drought but do not produce viable seeds
How did they figure thiese things out?
- trial and error, lots of death
- potatoes: plant eyes or whole potatoes
- sprout greens (non-nutritive, sometimes poisonous)
- root is starchy food
- demonstrates how much knowledge was required for domestication
- first planting experiments ~16e3 YBP
- first villages ~6e3 YBP
- primates can build on knowledge base with large brains
moving onto
-- pop quiz on reading --
Communication:
- DoubleSpeak article:
- euphemism:
- word or phrase to make something less unpleasant than it is
- "cultural disadvantaged": poor or poorly educated
- "passed away": dead
- "..." killed
- "kicked the bucket": died
- "laid off":fired
- political correctness
- word or phrase to make something less unpleasant than it is
- euphemism:
- making something simple uncomprehensible because of excess words
- use large words to confuse people
- respond at length without saying anything
- aka gobbledlygook
- Alan Greenspan
- technical language associated with a trade or technology
- snowboard lingo: "shreddin" as opposed to skiers "shrout"?
- broadcast journalism: generic "throwback"
- yoga (hatha?): names of positions
- computer techs: ID10T and "realign the linear power accelerator"
- words are overloaded, take different meaning in context than in common usage
- make ordinary things/people seem more important
- Librarian: Media Specialist
- Secretaries: Administrative Assistant or Office Manager
- superiors -> subordinates ("It's cold in here.")
- missed that question
- co-pilot to pilot: indirect to avoid questioning authority
- -> plane crashed

no subject
And I didn't even use one of the annoying animated icons! Whee!
Alarm clocks.