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Looking beyond history: Tracing the dispersal of the Malaysian complex of crops to Africa.

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In his 1959 book Africa: Its Peoples and their Culture History, George P. Murdock suggested that a Malaysian complex of crops dispersed to Africa in ancient times across the Indian… Click to show full abstract

In his 1959 book Africa: Its Peoples and their Culture History, George P. Murdock suggested that a Malaysian complex of crops dispersed to Africa in ancient times across the Indian Ocean along the Sabaean Lane. The Malaysian complex comprised bananas, sugarcane, taro, three yam species, rice, Polynesian arrowroot, breadfruit, coconut, areca palm and betel leaf. Except for rice, arrowroot and potentially taro, most of these crops were domesticated in the Island Southeast Asia-New Guinea region, from where they dispersed to Africa. Our reassessment of agronomic, archaeological, Classical, genetic and historical sources shows that we need to go beneath standard historical narratives to recover a much more ancient and complex history of crop introductions to Africa. Despite considerable uncertainty and fragmented research, we are still able to conclude that the Malaysian complex of crops did not arrive in Africa as a complete assemblage at one time or along one route. Multiple lines of evidence suggest that these crops arrived in Africa at different times and followed different pathways of introduction to the continent. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

Keywords: beyond history; complex crops; looking beyond; malaysian complex; history tracing

Journal Title: American journal of botany
Year Published: 2022

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