Ancient soil temperatures may have steered millet farming across Neolithic East Asia
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Why This Matters
Stories like this show real progress in protecting our planet and fighting climate change, giving us hope for a sustainable future.
Millet has been an important crop in East Asia for much of the Holocene, a period beginning about 11,700 years ago. To better understand how environmental conditions may have shaped the development of millet agriculture, researchers from the Institute of Earth Environment of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, and their collaborators investigated loess deposits from the Chinese Loess Plateau (CLP).
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Original story published by phys.org.
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