Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Rice in Dravidian
View through CrossRef
AbstractThe Dravidian languages, now spoken mainly in peninsular India, form one of two main branches of the Zagrosian language family, whose other main branch consists of Elamitic and Brahui. Proto-Dravidian, the oldest reconstructible form of Dravidian, shows a society whose economy is based mainly on herding. While the speakers of Proto-Dravidian had some agricultural knowledge, they do not appear to have brought cereals with them when they moved from western Iran to the borderlands of South Asia in the fourth millennium BCE. Linguistic evidence shows that they had contact with Indo-Iranian speakers, and some groups of Dravidian speakers entered the Indus Valley before or during the period of the Harappan civilization. Dravidian-speaking groups played a significant role in herding and agriculture during that period and later, and may have been the first to cultivate rice on a large scale in the Indus Valley.
Title: Rice in Dravidian
Description:
AbstractThe Dravidian languages, now spoken mainly in peninsular India, form one of two main branches of the Zagrosian language family, whose other main branch consists of Elamitic and Brahui.
Proto-Dravidian, the oldest reconstructible form of Dravidian, shows a society whose economy is based mainly on herding.
While the speakers of Proto-Dravidian had some agricultural knowledge, they do not appear to have brought cereals with them when they moved from western Iran to the borderlands of South Asia in the fourth millennium BCE.
Linguistic evidence shows that they had contact with Indo-Iranian speakers, and some groups of Dravidian speakers entered the Indus Valley before or during the period of the Harappan civilization.
Dravidian-speaking groups played a significant role in herding and agriculture during that period and later, and may have been the first to cultivate rice on a large scale in the Indus Valley.
Related Results
Amended Final Report on the Safety Assessment of Oryza Sativa (Rice) Bran Oil, Oryza Sativa (Rice) Germ Oil, Rice Bran Acid, Oryza Sativa (Rice) Bran Wax, Hydrogenated Rice Bran Wax, Oryza Sativa (Rice) Bran Extract, Oryza Sativa (Rice) Extract, Oryza Sat
Amended Final Report on the Safety Assessment of Oryza Sativa (Rice) Bran Oil, Oryza Sativa (Rice) Germ Oil, Rice Bran Acid, Oryza Sativa (Rice) Bran Wax, Hydrogenated Rice Bran Wax, Oryza Sativa (Rice) Bran Extract, Oryza Sativa (Rice) Extract, Oryza Sat
This report addresses the safety of cosmetic ingredients derived from rice, Oryza sativa. Oils, Fatty Acids, and Waxes : Rice Bran Oil functions in cosmetics as a conditioning agen...
Can the semasiographic/logographic Indus script answer the Dravidian question? Insights from Indus script’s gemstone related fish-signs, and Indus gemstone-word “maṇi”
Can the semasiographic/logographic Indus script answer the Dravidian question? Insights from Indus script’s gemstone related fish-signs, and Indus gemstone-word “maṇi”
From archaeogenetic, linguistic, archaeological, and ethnographic evidences, several scholars have linked the people of ancient Indus valley civilization (IVC) with the ancestors o...
Ancestral Dravidian Languages in Indus Civilization: Ultraconserved Dravidian Tooth-word Reveals Deep Linguistic Ancestry and Supports Genetics
Ancestral Dravidian Languages in Indus Civilization: Ultraconserved Dravidian Tooth-word Reveals Deep Linguistic Ancestry and Supports Genetics
Ever since the discovery of Indus valley civilization, scholars have debated the linguistic identities of its people. This study analyzes numerous archaeological, linguistic, archa...
Ancestral Dravidian languages in Indus Civilization: ultraconserved Dravidian tooth-word reveals deep linguistic ancestry and supports genetics
Ancestral Dravidian languages in Indus Civilization: ultraconserved Dravidian tooth-word reveals deep linguistic ancestry and supports genetics
Abstract
Ever since the discovery of Indus valley civilization, scholars have debated the linguistic identities of its people. This study ana...
Extraction of Rice Bran Oil from Rice Bran by Supercritical Carbon Dioxide
Extraction of Rice Bran Oil from Rice Bran by Supercritical Carbon Dioxide
Rice bran is an important source of nutrients that have many good bioactive compounds. This study examined the extraction of bran rice oil using supercritical carbon dioxide. Fr...
Analisis Usaha Tani Padi dengan Pola Rotasi Tanaman Padi-Padi-Kacang Tanah dan Pola Rotasi Tanam Padi-Padi-Jagung (Studi Kasus di Desa Mojokrapak Kecamatan Tembelang Kabupaten Jombang)
Analisis Usaha Tani Padi dengan Pola Rotasi Tanaman Padi-Padi-Kacang Tanah dan Pola Rotasi Tanam Padi-Padi-Jagung (Studi Kasus di Desa Mojokrapak Kecamatan Tembelang Kabupaten Jombang)
The purpose of this study was to find out how much income rice farming has with the rice-rice-peanut cropping pattern and the rice-rice-corn cropping pattern in Mojokrapak Village,...
DETECTION OF GENETICALLY MODIFIED RICE LOCALLY AVAILABLE IN PUNJAB, PAKISTAN
DETECTION OF GENETICALLY MODIFIED RICE LOCALLY AVAILABLE IN PUNJAB, PAKISTAN
Rice (Oryza sativa L.) is an important cereal crop that provides food to half of the world's population. Pakistan's traditional and premium quality rice is mostly exported to Europ...
The Rice (Oryza Sativa L.) Rc Gene, Which Imparts Resistance To Pre-Harvest Sprouting, Retains Seed and Milled Rice Quality
The Rice (Oryza Sativa L.) Rc Gene, Which Imparts Resistance To Pre-Harvest Sprouting, Retains Seed and Milled Rice Quality
Abstract
Pre-harvest sprouting (PHS) in cereal crops, including rice ( Oryza sativa L.), causes substantial yield and end-use quality losses worldwide. These losses could b...

