When he needed his alley cat instincts, they were there, under all that domestication, all that soft living, which he takes for granted. |
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Armstrong's analysis indicates the particular deployment of a new ideology of bourgeois morality centring on the strict domestication of women. |
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Despite her understanding of the pitfalls of domestication, however, she never gives up her claims to freedom or to a home for her family. |
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The domestication of plants from their wild progenitors has led to the production of a wide variety of crops that share a number of traits. |
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Still another feature disqualifying many mammal species from domestication is the lack of suitable social structure. |
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Through domestication, humans turned dogs into tools to help them dominate nature. |
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In addition to exponentially increasing certain animal populations, the process of domestication has changed the very nature of its subjects. |
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Perhaps respect requires leaving animals alone in the wild and not producing animals for domestication. |
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Since the domestication of dogs and the beginning of agriculture, humans have shaped the evolution of many forms of life. |
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The horse also survived, but only through its domestication and preservation overseas. |
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For example, the domestication of cattle did not begin as a simple prospect of milk and meat. |
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Early Woodland domestication specifically has been identified at sites within or near the Mid-Ohio Valley. |
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One of the earliest methods used to increase yield and hardiness was the domestication of plants. |
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He reverses the usual humancentric perspective, asking what domestication has meant to the apple tree, the potato, and the tulip. |
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Native Americans certainly altered the landscape with the use of fire, land cultivation, plant domestication, and hunting. |
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Maize was domesticated from its wild progenitor, teosinte, between 6,250 and 10,000 years ago in a single domestication event. |
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That's hard to imagine, given the creature's resistance to domestication and its propensity for using its quills to keep humans away. |
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Our ultimate goal was to determine whether barley was domesticated more than once and to pinpoint the region of barley domestication. |
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Settlements began to encourage the growth of plants such as barley and lentils and the domestication of pigs, sheep and goats. |
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If the domestication is complete, the humanity of the native is obliterated, at least, until he assimilates the dominant culture. |
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The Enlightenment was the beginning of the gradual domestication of the doctrine, and its eventual assimilation to a secular understanding. |
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The plant has a fascinating history of origin and domestication, and has been intimately involved in human history. |
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It is not the domestication of the sacred or the religious of which I speak, but of the divine. |
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Coffee spread widely throughout the Arab world in the first century after its domestication. |
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First off, the man's cured himself of his unfortunate bout with domestication, and the rest of this album grooves, grooves, grooves. |
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Under domestication, it may be truly said that the whole organisation becomes in some degree plastic. |
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Moreover, selective breeding has been for fur characteristics, rather than for domestication. |
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Without any conscious program at all the beginning of plant domestication started a melioristic process. |
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True to the formula, Bond so overwhelms her that she trades in her independent if empty existence and accepts domestication. |
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Regardless of the time frame it is generally accepted that the domestication of cattle followed sheep, goats, and pigs. |
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He argues that the movie marks the beginning of Hepburn's domestication, with her own consent and even collaboration. |
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Cereal collecting soon gave way to cereal cultivation and the domestication of sheep and cattle. |
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The development of human civilisation is intimately bound up with the domestication of cereals. |
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Along the way, the process of domestication began by keeping rabbits in hutches for breeding and meat production. |
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For many crop species, such as corn or wheat, varieties involved in the early stages of domestication are lost. |
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She picks out the Luddite unrest to make it seem that the danger of working-class crowds actually engendered the need for middle-class female domestication. |
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Because researchers have focused their analyses on plant domestication and cultivation, questions related to wood use have received less attention. |
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Uncertainties in history, archeology, biogeography, anthropology and biosystematics obscure the dates and places of the first domestication of cultivated crops. |
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Just as people once domesticated cattle, sheep, and chickens, so, it is claimed, it is the turn of prawns and reef fish to enter an era of rapid domestication. |
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Indeed, Australian researchers recently demonstrated that sapphism among cows may well be caused by environmental pressures and the stress of domestication. |
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Llamas and alpacas, sometimes considered to be the same species, may both have been derived from the guanaco through a thousand years or more of domestication. |
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The crisis provoked by her burning the meat heightens her resentful awareness of loss of individuality to which the domestication of marriage has subjected her. |
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The Grammys are the first step in the singer's domestication, of his certain transmogrification from hate-filled bad boy to lovable, safe, pop dreamboat. |
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What I see happening, with writers like Charlaine Harris and Stephenie Meyer, is the domestication of the vampire. |
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To see if this was a general trend of laboratory domestication or was something specific to the house mouse, she investigated a second species, the deer mouse. |
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Only minor correlation is found between ancientry and domestication model for the 20 economically most important crops. |
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This has been used for thousands of years in the domestication of plants and animals. |
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Sedentary agriculture led to the development of property rights, domestication of plants and animals, and larger family sizes. |
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About 4,000 BC, the Neolithic Revolution reached Britain and Ireland, with domestication of animals, arable farming and pottery. |
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The Paleolithic was an age of purely hunting and gathering while in the Neolithic domestication of plants and animals had occurred. |
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These activities are on an entirely different scale to those associated with agriculture, but they are nevertheless domestication on some level. |
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Those animals must have been introduced from the mainland, which suggests domestication in the adjacent mainland by then. |
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There was also a separate domestication in China which took place about 8000 years ago. |
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Neolithic Portugal experimented with domestication of herding animals, the raising of some cereal crops and fluvial or marine fishing. |
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One of the vital instruments which facilitated long distance trade was portage and the domestication of beasts of burden. |
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However, rabbits and humans interact in many different ways beyond domestication. |
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Deer have long been bred in captivity as ornaments for parks, but only in the case of reindeer has thorough domestication succeeded. |
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Hunting of wild birds as well as their domestication would have required considerable knowledge of their habits. |
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However, the earliest instances of successful domestication of dogs may be much more ancient than this. |
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This larger surplus caused all of the changes discussed earlier in the domestication revolution to become even more pronounced. |
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It is believed that domestication started between the Bronze and Iron Ages. |
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The territory is also considered to be the likely location for the human domestication of the horse. |
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The domestication of livestock was driven by the need to have food on hand when hunting was unproductive. |
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The next significant advance came with the domestication of the horses and mastering of equestrianism. |
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Mexico is the site of the domestication of maize, tomato and beans, which produced an agricultural surplus. |
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Ocellated turkeys were unsuitable for domestication, but were rounded up in the wild and penned for fattening. |
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Some researchers have suggested that African taurine cattle are derived from a third independent domestication from North African aurochsen. |
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Another characteristic of domestication is an increase in coat color variation. |
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Before the availability of DNA techniques to resolve the questions related to the domestication of the horse, various hypotheses were proposed. |
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Selection for easily dyeable white fleeces began early in sheep domestication, and as white wool is a dominant trait it spread quickly. |
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The origin and domestication of sweet potato is thought to be in either Central America or South America. |
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The domestication of plants began at least 12,000 years ago with cereals in the Middle East, and the bottle gourd in Asia. |
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Domestication syndrome is the suite of phenotypic traits arising during domestication that distinguish crops from their wild ancestors. |
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The domestication of animals is the mutual relationship between animals with the humans who have influence on their care and reproduction. |
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The beginnings of animal domestication involved a protracted coevolutionary process with multiple stages along different pathways. |
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The earliest human attempts at plant domestication occurred in the Middle East. |
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Continued domestication was gradual, a process of intermittent trial and error. |
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The theory was unable to explain curly tails nor domestication syndrome exhibited by plants. |
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They claim that this kind of domestication demands a totalitarian relationship with both the land and the plants and animals being domesticated. |
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They say that whereas, in a state of wildness, all life shares and competes for resources, domestication destroys this balance. |
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Packhorses have been used since the earliest period of domestication of the horse. |
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Tussah moths are harder to raise than Bombyx moths, which have been selected for thousands of years for domestication. |
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Alpacas evolved in South America with the domestication of the Vicugna, which has the finest fibre in the world. |
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We know little about the role of these constraints on crop domestication, nor how artificial selection can escape them. |
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More recently, the sheep liver fluke probably developed a taste for people as a consequence of livestock domestication. |
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Microsatellite DNA variation and the evolution, domestication and phylogeography of taurin and zebu cattle. |
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Earliest domestication of common millet in East Asia extended to 10,000 years ago. |
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Three centers of cattle domestication may have existed, with no crossbreeding of animals until sometime after 2,000 years ago. |
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Perennial rice, wheat, and sorghum are examples of the wide-hybridization efforts, while KernzaTm wheatgrass and Silphium oilseed crops are examples of rapid domestication. |
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The Neolithic period saw the development of early villages, agriculture, animal domestication, tools and the onset of the earliest recorded incidents of warfare. |
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The more southern cultural groups of North America were responsible for the domestication of many common crops now used around the world, such as tomatoes and squash. |
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Horses have been selectively bred since their domestication. |
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One classification was based on body types and conformation, suggesting the presence of four basic prototypes that had adapted to their environment prior to domestication. |
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Recent genetic studies suggest that species used by modern cultivators descend from multiple wild populations, but a detailed history of domestication is not yet forthcoming. |
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Pat Shipman, from Pennsylvania State University in the United States, argues that the domestication of the dog gave modern humans an advantage when hunting. |
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Anthropologist Pat Shipman, of Pennsylvania State University, suggested that domestication of the dog could have played a role in Neanderthals' extinction. |
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In both locations, the animal has proved wholly amenable to domestication. |
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The domestication of camels allowed Arabian nomads to control the long distance trade in spices and silk from the Far East to the Arabian Peninsula. |
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These populations may also be in the process of domestication. |
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The domestication of camels at a later time also helped encourage trade routes over land, which were called caravans, and linked Indus Valley with the Mediterranean. |
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It also made possible nomadic pastoralism in semi arid areas, along the margins of deserts, and eventually led to the domestication of both the dromedary and Bactrian camel. |
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This stimulated the domestication of local European wild boar resulting in a third domestication event with the Near Eastern genes dying out in European pig stock. |
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The Neolithic was the period of domestication of plants and animals. |
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The place of this region is called the ethea of animals and refers to the place outside the domain of Greek culture, to the place of the barbarian who resists domestication. |
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