Evolution made to order

plant breeding and technological innovation in twentieth-century America

285 pages

English language

Published Feb. 14, 2016

ISBN:
978-0-226-39008-6
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
931476568

View on OpenLibrary

(1 review)

"In the mid-twentieth century, American plant breeders, frustrated by their dependence on natural variation in creating new crops and flowers, eagerly sought technologies that could extend human control over nature. Their search led them to celebrate a series of strange tools: an x-ray beam directed at dormant seeds, a drop of chromosome-altering colchicine on a flower bud, and a piece of radioactive cobalt in a field of growing crops. According to scientific and popular reports of the time, these mutation-inducing methods would generate variation on demand, in turn allowing breeders to genetically engineer crops and flowers to order. Creating a new crop or flower would soon be as straightforward as innovating any other modern industrial product. In Evolution Made to Order, Helen Anne Curry traces the history of America's pursuit of tools that could speed up evolution. It is an immersive journey through the scientific and social worlds of midcentury …

3 editions

Subjects

  • Plant mutation breeding
  • Plant genetic engineering
  • Genetic engineering
  • History

Places

  • United States