Eric Hanson wrote:So right from its start, Carolina, and especially South Carolina was an agricultural exporter from inception.
Rice and Slavery In the 1690s, Carolina’s colonists started exporting rice. They learned how to cultivate this crop from enslaved Africans, who had grown it in West
Africa. Growing rice required a large labor force. So planters imported more enslaved Africans to do the work.
Christopher Columbus (l. 1451-1506) had introduced sugar cane to the region on his second voyage of 1493. The Spanish were still much more interested in finding gold and silver, but they found the profit of sugar too enticing to pass up. They imported skilled sugar masters from the Canaries in 1515 and sent their first shipment of sugar to Europe soon after.
The Portuguese discovered Brazil in 1500, and it did not take them long to begin planting sugar cane there. The first sugar plantation was established in 1518, and by the late 1500s, Brazil had become the leading supplier of sugar to the European markets.
Scott Weinberg wrote:I would like to know what a Wiki page is exactly and how in the end, it will be different than a forum site such as this.
if the end, the answer is, it is a collection of things, then how is the collection different.
is it connected to something different or is it a collective all it's own.
Do people contribute directly or to a few constructors of this " Wiki Page"
Inquiring minds would like to know. I presume this is a simple answer, as it is has been stated as a good solution for providing lots of answers.
Cristobal Cristo wrote:Well, that book would answer the questions of the thread creator and more ambitious builders.
If someone does not want to read a book, they can go through various websites, articles and extract the information they need. It's already available.
Regular masonry heater building books are structured this way and help to understand a lot of ideas and connect them. Simple building recipes are not so simple after all, because they leave a lot of questions not answered, they are based on vague assumptions and leave the reader sometimes even more confused.
Leah Hamilton wrote:It seems to me like there is a big hole in available information - a consistently reliable, long lasting, building plan for a 'basic model' (batch box).
Cristobal Cristo wrote:Good stove building book/e-book should have the following:...