Title: Natural Selections Farms Spinach Field
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3Natural Selections Farms Spinach Field
with Harvest Rows
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5Evolution of US Land Grant Institutions System
- Morrill Land Grant Act of 1862
- Hatch Act of 1867
- Second Morrill Land Grant Act of 1890
- Smith-Lever Act of 1914
6Morrill Land Grant of 1862
- . . . the endowment, support, and maintenance of
at least one college where the leading object
shall be, without excluding other scientific and
classical studies, and including military
tactics, to teach such branches of learning as
are related to agricultural and mechanical arts,
in such manner as the legislatures of the states
may respectively prescribe, in order to promote
the liberal and practical education of the
industrial classes in the several pursuits and
professions of life
7Hatch Act of 1867
- Authorized the federal funding for an
agricultural experimental station in connection
with each land grant institution.
8Second Morrill Land Grant Act of 1890
- Agreed to supplement by direct appropriation
the income from the Morrill Land Grant Act of
1862. To receive the money a state had to show
that race or color was not an admission criterion
to the states land grant institution, or else
designate a separate land grant institution for
people of color.
9Smith-Lever Act of 1914
- Established the system of cooperative extension
services to bring people the benefits of current
developments in the field of agriculture, home
economics, and related topics. Came to encompass
a program of on-campus instruction, research, and
off-campus extension work.
10WHEAT!
11Wheat Prehistory, History
- 10000BPmutation or hybridization on emmer in
Fertile Crescent - 8000BPto make flat cakes in Switzerland
- 4-5000BPEgyptians make leavened bread
- 2200BPRomans form first bakers guilds
- 1200ADEngland adopted laws to regulate prices
and limit profits of bread
12Forms of Wheat
- Emmerlow yielding. No hull due to mutation.
Staple cereal of prehistorical Middle East and
key reason why early agriculture worked. - Einkornmore resistant to cold, drought. Major
reason why Bronze Age Europeans had worn teeth. - Modern wheat varieties are the result of
mutations of the above two.
13Wheat Characteristics
- Largest single food crop on earth
- Most wheat made directly into human food
- Easily stored and transported if kept dry
- Not a very high yielding (or profitable) crop
- Thus not commonly grown in prime agricultural
areas - And thus may expand into areas unsuitable for
crop agriculture during periods of high
demandUSSR Virgin and Idle Lands Scheme, US
Dust Bowl - Two types for end usehard and soft
14Global Wheat Economy
- Many major producers consume nearly all they
produceIndia and China, for example - Major exportersless populated semi-arid
grassland/prairie areas - Pampas of Argentina, Uruguay
- Murray-Darling Valley of SE Australia
- Ukraine steppes
- US and Canada plains and prairies
15US Wheat Yield, 1920-2000
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18Mid-American Grasslands
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20US Wheat Classes
- Durumvery hard, for semolina flour
- Hard Red Spring hard, high protein, used in
bread and hard baked goods - Hard Red Winter hard, high protein, used in
bread and hard baked goods - Soft Red Winter used in many products
- Soft White low gluten content, used to make
pasteries - Albino newly used albino version of red wheat
used to make a whole wheat white breadsoft and
mushy, but with 3 times the fiber
21Hard Red Winter Wheat Region
22Hard Red Spring Wheat Region
23Durum, Soft Red Winter Wheat Regions
24White Wheat Region
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26Role (and advantage) of Chicago (and, later,
others as well)
- Rail Centertrunk lines and feeder systems
- Mechanical Farming InnovationsJohn Deeres plow
and McCormicks reaper - Elevators
- Chicago Board of Trade
27US Wheat Production by State, 1859-1994
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34Bagged, Stacked Wheat
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39 US Wheat Flour Manufacture by
State, 1870-1987
40US Railroads, 1830. 1840, 1850
41US Railroads, 1860
42US Railroads, 1880
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51Chicago Board of Trade
- Established March 1848
- Established uniform weight of a bushel of wheat
at 60 pounds - Adopted and firmly enforced a grading system for
all wheat - Created an independent inspection system to
ensure that everyone followed the rule - Thus ensuring that sellers and buyers could trade
at a distance (telegraph) with confidence
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53Change, and the Future
- Growth in average farm size
- Competition with corn, soybeans
- Competition with Argentina, Brazil, others
- High cost of energy
- Water supplyirrigation in a dry land
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