The major crops of the world such as tobacco,
sugar, cotton, tea, the entire spectrum of spices, rubber, and coffee and
chocolate have had myriad impacts on world culture in both social and economic manners
when looked at through the most rudimentary lens. The impact of these crops
however goes beyond just the social and economic layers of society; in fact,
they are a foundation for society as a whole, contributing to the discovery of
all corners of the Earth and the technological progress needed to accomplish
such feats. However, before each new crop could be discovered in its native
region and then mass cultivated and produced, explorers needed a means to
discovery and cultivation, a means brought about by the plant and byproduct
most influential on world history: wood.
Timber http://www.photo-dictionary.com/photofiles/list/9714/13188timber_pile.jpg |
Before
technology, wood served as a fuel source for man, burnt for warmth and preparing
food beneath their shelters constructed of timber. This use of wood lies at the
heart of the human ability to survive and it has been maintained (and
over-harvested) in our species’ history as a primary resource for continued
life in all regions of the world. Beyond being used as a fuel for fire (which
encompasses endless uses within itself) wood and trees have been used structurally
since the beginning of time in both transportation and shelter needs. Without
the wooden ships that brought Europeans to the far-East and also the New World,
all of the aforementioned crops would not have been cultivated and produced in
the way we know them today. This also includes the entire populations of enslaved
peoples brought to the New World for cultivation of all of such crops and other
appalling “uses.”
Slave Ship http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/4d/NavioNegreiro.gif |
Basic technologies such as baskets and hunting and
gathering tools constructed from wood contributed to the commencement of the Neolithic
Revolution, the basis of all agriculture in the modern world. With agriculture
came the need for increased production and therefore technology such as plows
and mills--constructed from wood--to supply entire societies with food and a
wholesome livelihood in general. The paper used from wood and used as money in
its earliest uses still serves as nearly the entire basis of functioning societies
and economies today. Likewise, the transfer of information through written
literature and scientific report now serves as the entire basis of the world’s
collections of knowledge and data. Beyond these crucial uses that have molded
society into its modern form, wood has also contributed to ceremonial purposes
and also a building material for the weapons that paved the way for world
discovery and the annihilation of entire cultures. It is used medicinally and
in sport as well. The list goes on.
Written Notes of Leonardo Da Vinci http://www.leonardo-da-vinci-biography.com/images/leonardo-da-vinci-anatomy.4.jpg |
Trees and the wood produced from them are the
foundation of society’s most influential factors today. The production of crops
that developed the world was not possible without wooden resources. Without
wood life as we know it in the modern day simply would not exist, and it is
clear that beyond their ecological functions, trees and wood have had the
greatest impact on world history.