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Creating Abundance
Biological Innovation and American Agricultural Development

This book argues biological innovations played a crucial, if unheralded, role in American agricultural development.

Alan L. Olmstead (Author), Paul W. Rhode (Author)

9780521857116, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 8 September 2008

480 pages, 35 b/w illus. 7 colour illus.
23.6 x 16 x 3 cm, 0.78 kg

'… [there is] much to admire in what Olmstead and Rhode have done and - almost as importantly - how they have done it … generating new questions in a subject area that has for too long lain fallow.' The British Journal for the History of Science

This book demonstrates that American agricultural development was far more dynamic than generally portrayed. In the two centuries before World War II, a stream of biological innovations revolutionized the crop and livestock sectors, increasing both land and labor productivity. Biological innovations were essential for the movement of agriculture onto new lands with more extreme climates, for maintaining production in the face of evolving threats from pests, and for the creation of the modern livestock sector. These innovations established the foundation for the subsequent Green and Genetic Revolutions. The book challenges the misconceptions that, before the advent of hybrid corn, American farmers single-mindedly invested in labor-saving mechanical technologies and that biological technologies were static.

1. Introduction
2. The red queen and the hard reds: productivity growth in American wheat, 1800–1940
3. Corn: America's crop
4. Cotton: variety innovation and the making of king cotton
5. Weevils, worms, and wilts: the red queen's cotton playground
6. The other revolution in the cotton economy: cotton's revival in the twentieth century
7. That 'stinking weed of America': the evolution of tobacco production
8. California: creating a cornucopia
9. Livestock in the farm economy
10. Defining and redesigning America's livestock
11. Nature's perfect food: inventing the modern dairy industry
12. Draft power
13. Conclusion: tying it together.

Subject Areas: History of the Americas [HBJK]

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