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pampa
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Journal Article
Agricultural History (2000) 74 (1): 90–91.
Published: 01 January 2000
...Donna J. Guy Book Reviews The Rise of Capitalism on the Pampas: The Estancias of Buenos Aires, 1785-1870. By Samuel Amaral. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998. 371 pp., $59.95, ISBN 0-521-57248-7. From the late eighteenth century onward, Buenos Aires cattle and sheep ranches underwent...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2018) 92 (3): 351–379.
Published: 01 July 2018
... ( New York : Oxford University Press , 1971 ), 118 ; James R. Scobie , Revolution on the Pampas: A Social History of Argentine Wheat, 1860–1910 ( Austin : University of Texas Press , 1964 ). 16. Del Carrill , “Praderas de alfalfa.” Alfalfa could also be raised for hay...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2022) 96 (1-2): 128–163.
Published: 01 May 2022
... as the “Conquest of the Desert.” Under General Julio Roca, also from Tucumán and who succeeded Avellaneda as president and continued the conquest, the military killed, enslaved, and forced Indigenous people of La Pampa and Patagonia into reservations or to labor in the sugarcane fields of Tucumán where many died...
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Journal Article
Agricultural History (2014) 88 (2): 309–310.
Published: 01 April 2014
... regions around Veracruz, where hybrid Afro-European herding practices first developed, then moving northwards to eighteenthcentury French Louisiana, east to the tiny Caribbean island of Barbuda, and south to the Pampas grasslands and tasajo (salt-cured beef) producing regions of Uruguay and Argentina...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2019) 93 (3): 520–546.
Published: 01 July 2019
..., and indeed even in early oilseeds. A similarly rapid expansion and southward shift occurred a century ago in the linseed oil industry, when farmers in the Northern Great Plains and Prairies responded to a new demand for flax seed (linseed) and were eventually surpassed by growers in the Argentine Pampas...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2023) 97 (1): 1–47.
Published: 01 February 2023
... of yields, the exact same things happened in settler colonies around the world. The Argentine Pampas became a major rival to the American Great Plains, as did the Russian steppe and the Australian outback. Each of these grain-growing regions was predicated on the removal and extermination of Indigenous...
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Journal Article
Agricultural History (2020) 94 (3): 413–443.
Published: 01 July 2020
... of Pittsburg Press, 1995), 21-38. 16.
As historian Samuel Amaral noted long ago, “The traditional vision of Latin American rural estates as prestige-oriented rather than profit-oriented concerns has been increasingly challenged in recent decades.” Samuel Amaral, The Rise of Capitalism on the Pampas...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2007) 81 (2): 204–227.
Published: 01 April 2007
... Africa, New Zealand, and Australia, but also to the mid-latitude Argentine pampas and southern Siberian steppes. At the foundation of this acquisition were the tools of modern "technology": Torrens law, the transit, quit rents, survey grids, but especially the legal language and philosophy that made...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2023) 97 (1): 48–83.
Published: 01 February 2023
... controlled most of the high-desert plateaus, or pampas , in which caliche existed. But starting in 1879, Chile waged an aggressive, five-year war against its northern neighbor to take the nitrate fields. The War of the Pacific, or Saltpeter War, resulted in Chile's annexation of South America's most...
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Journal Article
Agricultural History (2022) 96 (3): 379–416.
Published: 01 August 2022
... Italian East African Empire (IEA). 20 Traversing the country's plateaus during the Italo-Ethiopian war, various Italian observers—from war correspondents to agriculturists in the army—confidently affirmed that highland Ethiopia could be like a new or greater Argentinian pampa for pioneering national...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2020) 94 (4): 512–544.
Published: 01 October 2020
... Sea, he also responded to pleas from a group of East European settlers who found themselves trapped in dire conditions in an uninhabited allotment along a new rail line in the Argentine pampas. With the arrival of funds and professional administrators sent from France by de Hirsch in response...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2012) 86 (3): 1–32.
Published: 01 July 2012
..., although Colombian ranchers experimented with European breeds, the environmental limits they faced effectively closed this path as a way to increase productivity levels. Because the Pampas were hospitable to European breeds, ranchers there could import large numbers of 22 2012 The Limits of Tropical...