Mapping byzantine sericulture in the global transfer of technology

HIGHLIGHTS

  • who: Khotan et al. from the Department of History, Fudan University, Shanghai, China have published the Article: Mapping Byzantine Sericulture in the Global Transfer of Technology, in the Journal: (JOURNAL)
  • what: The study shows that after its domestication in China, the mulberry silkworm Bombyx mori dispersed to Europe, South Asia, and Southern China, following independent dispersal events and developing into local silkworm strains. Considering the following reasoning, this evidence should not be accepted at face value.
  • future: It remains for future studies to show what concrete information about sericulture the authors may obtain . . .

     

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