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Quotations 

"Anno: 1621 [April] Afterwards they (as many as were able) began to plant their corn, in which service Squanto stood them in great stead, showing them both the manner how to set it, and after how to dress & tend it. Also he told them except they got fish & set with it (in these old grounds) it would come to nothing. . . . Some English seed they sew, as wheat & peas, but it came not to good, either by the badness of the seed or lateness of the season, or both, or some other defect." William Bradford, Of Plimoth Plantation
"An other work [of Indian women] is their planting of corn, wherein they exceed our English husband-men, keeping it so clear with their Clam shell hoes, as if it were a garden rather than a corn-field, not suffering a choking weed to advance his audacious head above their infant corn or an undermining worm to spoil his spurns. Their corn being ripe, they gather it, and drying it hard in the Sun, convey it to their barns, which be great holes digged in the ground. . . . But our hogs having found a way to unhinge their barn doors, and rob their garners, they are glad to implore their husbands' help to roll the bodies of trees over their holes. . . . " William Wood, New England's Prospect, 1634.
"We must explain the stunning, even awesome success of European agriculture, that is, the European way of manipulating the environment. . . . Let us examine four categories of organisms deeply involved in European expansion: (1) human beings; (2) animals closely associated with human beings-both the desirable animals like horses and cattle and undesirable varmints like rats and mice; (3) pathogens or microorganisms that cause disease in humans; and (4) weeds. Alfred W. Crosby, "Ecological Imperialism," The Texas Quarterly (1967).
"Much of human history has consisted of unequal conflicts between the haves and have nots, between peoples with farmer power and those without it, or between those who acquired it at different times." (p. 93) . . . "After 900 A.D. the Mexican crop trinity (corn, beans, and squash) triggered a population boom, but that boom came much too late to prepare Native Americans for the impending disaster of European colonization." (p. 152) Jared Diamond, Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies. (1998)