Exploring Animal Energy in the Arid Zone

More Camels, Fewer Wheels

Author: Richard W. Bulliet

About this book

Every society has an energy profile, that is, an array of energy sources, ranging in complexity from human power to nuclear fusion, that can be ranked according to their relative importance to that society.

From about 4000 BCE onward, animal muscle power becomes integrated into the energy profiles of many societies. The forms this integration takes include riding, carrying burdens, pulling wheeled vehicles and sleighs, operating mills and irrigation devices, and pulling plows, threshing sleds, and other agricultural implements. The use of animal power varies from region to region. These variations can be understood as falling into six discrete zones. The distinctive features of the arid zone from Morocco to Mongolia constitute the primary focus of this book.

Successive chapters deal with caravan trading as a mode of production, the relationship between dairying and the availability of working animals, the spread of hybrid animal breeding (mules, bukhts, dzos) as an economic enterprise, and the integration of pastoral nomadism into the overall economy.

 

Prof. Richard W. Bulliet is emeritus professor of history at Columbia University. He is the author of Islam: The View from the Edge, The Camel and The Wheel and the editor of The Columbia History of the Twentieth Century.

 

Format: Hardback

Pages: 168

Illustrated: Colour

ISBN Print: 9789087284183

ISBN ePDF: 9789400604650

Published: 1 July 2024

Language: English

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