In the Fertile Crescent, plants and animals spread quickly into Europe and North Africa. Innovations such as written language and wheels spread similarity quickly as well. People used domesticated crops rather than those that grew naturally. This shows that people easily adapted the Fertile Crescent’s food production. Chapter 10:
Eurasia has covered the largest East to West area of any continent. Diamond believes that this is yet another r advantage for Eurasia.
Eurasia had “amber fields of grain and spacious skies”.
With the New world not having these advantages, it slowed diffusion.
In the Fertile Crescent, plants and animals spread quickly into Europe and North Africa. Innovations such as written language and wheels spread similarity quickly as well. People used domesticated crops rather than those that grew naturally. This shows that people easily adapted the Fertile Crescent’s food production. Chapter 10:
Eurasia has covered the largest East to West area of any continent. Diamond believes that this is yet another r advantage for Eurasia. Eurasia had “amber fields of grain and spacious skies”. With the New world not having these advantages, it slowed diffusion.
In the Fertile Crescent, plants and animals spread quickly into Europe and North Africa. Innovations such as written language and wheels spread similarity quickly as well. People used domesticated crops rather than those that grew naturally. This shows that people easily adapted the Fertile Crescent’s food production. Chapter 10:
Eurasia has covered the largest East to West area of any continent. Diamond believes that this is yet another r advantage for Eurasia. Eurasia had “amber fields of grain and spacious skies”. With the New world not having these advantages, it slowed diffusion.
In the Fertile Crescent, plants and animals spread quickly into Europe and
North Africa. Innovations such as written language and wheels spread similarity quickly as well. People used domesticated crops rather than those that grew naturally. This shows that people easily adapted the Fertile Crescent’s food production.
Title | Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies |
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Author | Jared Diamond |
Type of Writing | Non-fiction book |
Category | Education |
Country | The US |
First Issue | 1997 |
Main Problem | Exploration of natural reasons why certain civilization survived |