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Oklahoma Agriculture in the Classroom

Classroom Resources



Agriculture-Related Books

Agriculture in the Ancient World

The Cave Painter of Lascaux (A Journey Through Time)
Angeletti, Roberta
Oxford, 1999
Grades 1-3
A child wanders away from her classmates and meets up with a tour guide dressed as a cave man. The characters tell readers about the people who painted the animals in the Lascaux Cave and what the paintings meant to them.
Stone Age Farmers Beside the Sea: Scotland's Prehistoric Village of Skara Brae
Arnold, Caroline
Clarion, 1996
Grades 4-7
A clear and informative text and revealing photographs offer readers a complete picture of life in the prehistoric Scottish Village of Skara Brae, where the community farmed, herded, hunted, and fished from 3100 B.C. to 2500 B.C.
Living Long Ago: Food and Eating
Brooks, Felicity, Bond, Shirley, Cook, Janet, Evans, Cheryl, Gower, Teri, Smith, Guy, Lyon, Chris Lyon
Usborne
Grades K-3
Mystery of the Lascaux Cave
Patent, Dorothy Hinshaw
Benchmark, 1998
Grades 4-7
The author discusses what is known, surmised, or guessed about the Magdalenian peoples who produced this burst of art in the form of engraved and colored bulls, bison, horses, and other animals that flow and posture along the cave's walls and ceilings. Includes informative sidebars, time lines, maps, and glossaries.
Ancient Agriculture: From Foraging to Farming
Woods, Michael, and Mary B. Woods
Runestone, 2000
Grades 3-6
Overview that includes a general chapter on the Stone Age as well as chapters on ancient America, Greece, and Rome. Focuses on basic agricultural information while offering plenty of interesting and detailed asides. Well-placed and well-captioned full-color photographs and reproductions enhance the text; chapter openers and sidebars are set off on parchmentlike backgrounds. A useful map at the beginning of the book shows the geographical areas where the cultures flourished as well as the time frames for each civilization.
Ancient Agricultural Technology: From Sickles to Plows
Woods, Michael, and Mary B. Woods
Technology in Ancient Cultures, 21st Century, 2011
Young Adult
Ancient Romans invented a machine to harvest grain and farmers in ancient China destroyed pests that harmed crops by brining in natural predators. The ancient Mayans restored nutrients to the soil by planting corn and beans together. People learned to farm more than 12,000 years ago. The first farmers used simple technology. They carried water to their crops by hand. They made farm tools from wood and animals bones. Over the centuries, ancient farmers devised better technology. Ancient Middle Easterners learned to breed sheep to produce different colors of wool. The ancient Chinese learned how to gro more rice using irrigation techniques. The ancient Greeks built machines for pumping water, grinding grain and crushing grapes and olives. What kinds of crops did ancient farmers grow? What kinds of animals did they raise? And how did people get their food before agriculture?