The Agricultural Revolution - including the domestication of plants and
animals in the Near East - that occurred 10,500 years ago ended millions
of years of human existence in small, mobile, egalitarian communities of
hunters-gatherers. This Neolithic transformation led to the formation of
sedentary communities that produced crops such as wheat, barley, peas,
lentils, chickpeas and flax and domesticated range of livestock,
including goats, sheep, cattle and pigs. All of these plants and animals
still play a major role in the contemporary global economy and
nutrition. This agricultural revolution also stimulated the later
development of the first urban centres. This volume examines the origins
and development of plant domestication in the Ancient Near East, along
with various aspects of the new Man-Nature relationship that
characterizes food-producing societies. It demonstrates how the rapid,
geographically localized, knowledge-based domestication of plants was a
human initiative that eventually gave rise to Western civilizations and
the modern human condition.