The history of the world according to corn - Chris A. Kniesly

2,545,587 views ・ 2019-11-26

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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Corn currently accounts for more than one tenth of our global crop production.
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The United States alone has enough cornfields to cover Germany.
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But while other crops we grow come in a range of varieties,
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over 99% of cultivated corn is the exact same type: Yellow Dent #2.
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This means that humans grow more Yellow Dent #2
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than any other plant on the planet.
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So how did this single variety of this single plant
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become the biggest success story in agricultural history?
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Nearly 9,000 years ago, corn, also called maize,
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was first domesticated from teosinte, a grass native to Mesoamerica.
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Teosinte’s rock-hard seeds were barely edible,
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but its fibrous husk could be turned into a versatile material.
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Over the next 4,700 years, farmers bred the plant into a staple crop,
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with larger cobs and edible kernels.
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As maize spread throughout the Americas, it took on an important role,
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with multiple indigenous societies revering a “Corn Mother”
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as the goddess who created agriculture.
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When Europeans first arrived in America, they shunned the strange plant.
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Many even believed it was the source of physical and cultural differences
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between them and the Mesoamericans.
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However,
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their attempts to cultivate European crops in American soil quickly failed,
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and the settlers were forced to expand their diet.
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Finding the crop to their taste, maize soon crossed the Atlantic,
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where its ability to grow in diverse climates made it a popular grain
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in many European countries.
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But the newly established United States was still the corn capital of the world.
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In the early 1800’s, different regions across the country
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produced strains of varying size and taste.
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In the 1850’s, however,
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these unique varieties proved difficult for train operators to package,
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and for traders to sell.
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Trade boards in rail hubs like Chicago encouraged corn farmers
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to breed one standardized crop.
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This dream would finally be realized at 1893’s World’s Fair,
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where James Reid’s yellow dent corn won the Blue Ribbon.
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Over the next 50 years, yellow dent corn swept the nation.
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Following the technological developments of World War II,
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mechanized harvesters became widely available.
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This meant a batch of corn that previously took a full day to harvest by hand
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could now be collected in just 5 minutes.
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Another wartime technology, the chemical explosive ammonium nitrate,
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also found new life on the farm.
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With this new synthetic fertilizer,
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farmers could plant dense fields of corn year after year,
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without the need to rotate their crops and restore nitrogen to the soil.
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While these advances made corn an attractive crop to American farmers,
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US agricultural policy limited the amount farmers could grow
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to ensure high sale prices.
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But in 1972, President Richard Nixon removed these limitations
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while negotiating massive grain sales to the Soviet Union.
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With this new trade deal and WWII technology,
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corn production exploded into a global phenomenon.
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These mountains of maize inspired numerous corn concoctions.
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Cornstarch could be used as a thickening agent for everything from gasoline to glue
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or processed into a low-cost sweetener known as High-Fructose Corn Syrup.
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Maize quickly became one of the cheapest animal feeds worldwide.
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This allowed for inexpensive meat production,
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which in turn increased the demand for meat and corn feed.
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Today, humans eat only 40% of all cultivated corn,
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while the remaining 60% supports consumer good industries worldwide.
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Yet the spread of this wonder-crop has come at a price.
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Global water sources are polluted by excess ammonium nitrate from cornfields.
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Corn accounts for a large portion of agriculture-related carbon emissions,
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partly due to the increased meat production it enables.
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The use of high fructose corn syrup may be a contributor to diabetes and obesity.
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And the rise of monoculture farming
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has left our food supply dangerously vulnerable to pests and pathogens—
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a single virus could infect the world’s supply of this ubiquitous crop.
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Corn has gone from a bushy grass
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to an essential element of the world’s industries.
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But only time will tell if it has led us into a maze of unsustainability.
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