Compared to some of the gleaming,
electronic inventions that fill our lives today, the plow doesn't seem
very exciting. It's a simple cutting tool used to carve a furrow into
the soil, churning it up to expose nutrients and prepare it for
planting. Yet the plow is probably the one invention that made all
others possible.
No
one knows who invented the plow, or exactly when it came to be. It
probably developed independently in a number of regions, and there is
evidence of its use in prehistoric eras. Prior to the plow, humans were
subsistence farmers or hunter/gatherers. Their lives were devoted solely
to finding enough food to survive from one season to the next. Growing
food added some stability to life, but doing it by hand was labor
intensive and took a long time. The plow changed all that.
Plows
made the work easier and faster. Improvements in the plow's design made
farming so efficient that people could harvest far more food than they
needed to survive. They could trade the surplus for goods or services.
And if you could get food by trading, then you could devote your
day-to-day existence to something other than growing food, such as
producing the goods and services that were suddenly in demand.
The
ability to trade and store materials drove the invention of written
language, number systems, fortifications and militaries. As populations
gathered to engage in these activities, cities grew. It's not a stretch
to say that the plow is responsible for the creation of human
civilization.
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