Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- Part I Determining What Our Ancestors Ate
- Part II Staple Foods: Domesticated Plants and Animals
- II.A Grains
- II.B Roots, Tubers, and Other Starchy Staples
- II.C Important Vegetable Supplements
- II.D Staple Nuts
- II.E Animal, Marine, and Vegetable Oils
- II.F Trading in Tastes
- II.G Important Foods from Animal Sources
- II.G.1 American Bison
- II.G.2 Aquatic Animals
- II.G.3 Camels
- II.G.4 Caribou and Reindeer
- II.G.5 Cattle
- II.G.6 Chickens
- II.G.7 Chicken Eggs
- II.G.8 Dogs
- II.G.9 Ducks
- II.G.10 Game
- II.G.11 Geese
- II.G.12 Goats
- II.G.13 Hogs (Pigs)
- II.G.14 Horses
- II.G.15 Insects
- II.G.16 Llamas and Alpacas
- II.G.17 Muscovy Ducks
- II.G.18 Pigeons
- II.G.19 Rabbits
- II.G.20 Sea Turtles and Their Eggs
- II.G.21 Sheep
- II.G.22 Turkeys
- II.G.23 Water Buffalo
- II.G.24 Yak
- Part III Dietary Liquids
- Part IV The Nutrients – Deficiencies, Surfeits, and Food-Related Disorders
- References
II.G.5 - Cattle
from II.G - Important Foods from Animal Sources
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2008
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- Part I Determining What Our Ancestors Ate
- Part II Staple Foods: Domesticated Plants and Animals
- II.A Grains
- II.B Roots, Tubers, and Other Starchy Staples
- II.C Important Vegetable Supplements
- II.D Staple Nuts
- II.E Animal, Marine, and Vegetable Oils
- II.F Trading in Tastes
- II.G Important Foods from Animal Sources
- II.G.1 American Bison
- II.G.2 Aquatic Animals
- II.G.3 Camels
- II.G.4 Caribou and Reindeer
- II.G.5 Cattle
- II.G.6 Chickens
- II.G.7 Chicken Eggs
- II.G.8 Dogs
- II.G.9 Ducks
- II.G.10 Game
- II.G.11 Geese
- II.G.12 Goats
- II.G.13 Hogs (Pigs)
- II.G.14 Horses
- II.G.15 Insects
- II.G.16 Llamas and Alpacas
- II.G.17 Muscovy Ducks
- II.G.18 Pigeons
- II.G.19 Rabbits
- II.G.20 Sea Turtles and Their Eggs
- II.G.21 Sheep
- II.G.22 Turkeys
- II.G.23 Water Buffalo
- II.G.24 Yak
- Part III Dietary Liquids
- Part IV The Nutrients – Deficiencies, Surfeits, and Food-Related Disorders
- References
Summary
Although cattle have been domesticated for less than 10,000 years, they are the world’s most important animals, as judged by their multiple contributions of draft power, meat, milk, hides, and dung. In Asia and Africa, the tie between man and beast is much more than economic (as it is in the West), and domestication itself seems to have occurred for noneconomic reasons. Cattle, like other ruminants, convert cellulose-rich materials – that are otherwise useless to humans as food – into carbohydrates, fats, and proteins. (In industrialized countries, however, cattle are fed grains from cultivated land and consequently can be viewed as competing for foods that could go directly to humans.)
The term “cattle” can have a broad or narrow meaning. One usage subsumes all five domesticated species in the genus Bos as cattle. The other restricts the term to only the two main bovines in this genus: European cattle (Bos taurus) and zebu cattle (Bos indicus). Both animals were derived from the same wild ancestor, the aurochs (Bos primigenius), and they can interbreed to produce fertile offspring. Three much more localized Asian species sometimes fall under the rubric of domesticated cattle: mithan (Bos frontalis, yak (Bos grunniens), and banteng (Bos javanicus). The mithan is found in a forested region that encompasses northeast India, northwest Burma, and Bhutan. Its ancestor is the wild gaur (Bos gaurus). The yak of Nepal and Tibet was derived from the wild yak (Bos mutus), whereas the banteng (“Bali cattle”), found on several islands of the Indonesian archipelago, was domesticated from the wild banteng of the same species. Unless otherwise qualified, the term “cattle” in this chapter refers to the two main species derived from the aurochs.
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- Information
- The Cambridge World History of Food , pp. 489 - 496Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000
References
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