[HN Gopher] The Maya, and the maize that sustained them, had sur...
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The Maya, and the maize that sustained them, had surprising
southern roots
Author : diodorus
Score : 14 points
Date : 2022-03-27 19:36 UTC (2 days ago)
(HTM) web link (www.science.org)
(TXT) w3m dump (www.science.org)
| reactspa wrote:
| An unexpected thing I learned in a recent dive into learning how
| to make Tamales:
|
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nixtamalization
|
| This complicated process of preparing maize makes more nutrients
| bioavailable.
|
| The Aztecs figured it out somehow.
|
| I learned about this when trying to buy maize flour and
| discovering that there are 2 types: nixtamalized and non.
|
| Reminds me of how certain South American indigenous tribes have
| this very complicated ritual to prepare Cassava. They didn't know
| it, but it removes cyanide and makes Cassava way safer to
| consume.
| throwawaygh wrote:
| _> Reminds me of how certain South American indigenous tribes
| have this very complicated ritual to prepare Cassava. They didn
| 't know it, but it removes cyanide and makes Cassava way safer
| to consume._
|
| This is basically how a lot of modern experimental science
| still works. Sort of black/grey box scientific reasoning.
|
| We have better theories, and better instruments for verifying
| those theories, but in the end? A bunch of people have high
| failure rates, but one guy's thing always works. You go over
| and ask that guy why his always works. He shows you his process
| and you are hopefully able to ape him. This knowledge is
| crystallized and handed down. Perhaps even formalized and
| written up if it's important enough, but often not.
|
| There's a word in tech for people who are good at this sort of
| "grey/black box observe the world and make it work without
| really knowing why" skillset. That word is hacking.
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