The passage primarily describes the significance of B. the domestication of plants. It details the origins of various crops and the early farming practices that marked the transition from wild harvesting to agriculture.
The wild origins of crops including wheat, barley, and peas are traced to the Near East region. Cereals were grown in Syria as long as 9,000 years ago, while figs were cultivated even earlier; prehistoric seedless fruits discovered in the Jordan Valley suggest fig trees were being planted some 11,300 years ago. The origins of rice and millet farming date to the same Neolithic period in China. The world’s oldest known rice paddy fields, discovered in eastern China in 2007, reveal evidence of ancient cultivation techniques such as flood and fire control. Though the transition from wild harvesting was gradual, the switch from a nomadic to a settled way of life is marked by the appearance of early Neolithic villages with homes equipped with grinding stones for processing grain.
—adapted from The Development of Agriculture, National Geographic
This passage describes the significance of
A.
labor specialization.
B.
the domestication of plants.
C.
creating food surpluses.
D.
the rise of the barter economy.
1 answer