- dicoc**** and T. t. conv. durum. The wild
plant is
called T. t. subsp.
dicoccoides. The
seeds have an
awned covering, the
sharp spikes helping the seeds...
- life in
Ottoman Syria.
Aaronsohn was the
discoverer of
emmer (Triti****
dicoccoides),
believed to be "the
mother of wheat." He
founded and was head of the...
-
multiple places independently. Wild
emmer wheat (T.
turgidum subsp.
dicoccoides) is less
widespread than einkorn,
favouring the
rocky basaltic and limestone...
-
because of its role in two
important hybridisation events. Wild
emmer (T.
dicoccoides and T. ararati****)
resulted from the
hybridisation of a wild wheat, T...
-
turgidum subsp. carthli**** (Nevski) Á.Löve Triti****
turgidum subsp.
dicoccoides (Asch. & Graebn.) T****. Triti****
turgidum subsp. dicoc**** (Schrank ex...
- wild T. boeoti****)
Emmer (Triti**** dicoc****,
descended from the wild T.
dicoccoides) Flax (Linum usitatissimum) Oats
Wheat Rye
Bitter vetch (Vicia ervilia)...
-
during his 1906
field trip,
discovered wild-growing
emmer (Triti****
dicoccoides), whom he
considered to be the "mother of wheat", an
important find for...
-
turgidum var. durum),
domesticated emmer (T. dicoccon) and wild
emmer (T.
dicoccoides),
Aegilops speltoides,
jointed goatgr**** (Ae. cylindrica), and triticale...
-
multiple places independently. Wild
emmer wheat (Triti****
turgidum subsp.
dicoccoides) is less
widespread than einkorn,
favouring the
rocky basaltic and limestone...
-
Mount Hermon in 1906, the
agronomist Aaron Aaronsohn discovered Triti****
dicoccoides, or
emmer wheat,
believed to be the "mother of all wheat." In 1909, he...