Ackland Art Museum. “Art and Cultural Exchange along the Silk Road.” Ackland Art Museum, ackland.org/exhibition/art-and-cultural-exchange-along-the-silk-road/#:~:text=The%20trade%20routes%20known%20collectively,of%20government%2C%20literary%20genres%2C%20musical.
Aj, Sachin & Nayaka, V S & Kalal, Prashant & Sanikommu, Vijay Rakesh Reddy. (2023). spices route and trade.
Ciolek, T. Matthew. “Silk Road Seattle.” Old World Trade Routes (OWTRAD). Accessed March 28, www.ciolek.com/OWTRAD/DATA/oddda.html.
Creighton University. “Silk Road GIS Mapping Project.” ArcGIS Online, creighton.maps.arcgis.com/apps/mapviewer/index.html?panel=gallery&suggestField=true&layers=9f27e53937994ce488ed775557a8da7b.
DALME. “Cumin and the Silk Road Spice Trade.” dalme.org/features/cumin-and-the-silk-road-spice-trade/.
“Did You Know: The Exchange of Spices along the Silk Roads.” UNESCO, en.unesco.org/silkroad/content/did-you-know-exchange-spices-along-silk-roads.
FasterCapital. “Spice Trade: How Exotic Flavors Traveled Along the Silk Route.” fastercapital.com/content/Spice-Trade–How-Exotic-Flavors-Traveled-Along-the-Silk-Route.html.
Flavor and Fortune. “Several Sources State that Cumin Originated in the Middle East and China, Some Say ‘Cumin Came from India.'” www.flavorandfortune.com/ffdataaccess/article.php?ID=467#:~:text=Several%20sources%20state%20that%20cumin,say%20’cumin%20came%20from%20India.
Geordie Torr. The Silk Roads : A History of the Great Trading Routes Between East and West. Arcturus, 2021. EBSCOhost, search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&AuthType=shib&db=e000xna&AN=2933078&site=ehost-live.
Iran Safar. “Silk Road History Facts.” iransafar.co/silk-road-history-facts/.
Jeffs, Jeremy, and Rebecca Dobbs. Spice Routes and Silk Roads. Alexandria, VA: Public Broadcasting Service (PBS). Film.
Jeremy Jeffs and Rebecca Dobbs. “Spice Routes and Silk Roads.” Public Broadcasting Service (PBS), video-alexanderstreet-com.eu1.proxy.openathens.net/watch/spice-routes-and-silk-roads#channel:story-of-india.
JOHN NOBLE WILFORD. “Under Centuries of Sand, a Trading Hub: Scientists in Egypt’s Desert Unearth a Maritime Rival to the Silk Road, Complete With Spices and Wine Under Centuries of Sand, a Hub to Rival Silk Road.” The New York Times 2002: F1-. Print.
NPR. “Is Cumin The Most Globalized Spice In The World?” NPR, 11 Mar. 2015, www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2015/03/11/392317352/is-cumin-the-most-globalized-spice-in-the-world.
Seasoned Pioneers. “The Silk Road.” www.seasonedpioneers.com/the-silk-road/.
Shafia, Louisa. “OFF DUTY — Eating & Drinking: Christmas Dinner by Way of the Silk Road — Sumptuous and Full of Warming Spice, These Persian Dishes Hit All the Right Notes for a Holiday Meal.” The Wall Street journal. Eastern edition 2016: n. pag. Print.
“Silk Road.” Facts and Details, factsanddetails.com/china/cat2/sub90/item50.html.
Silk Road Spices. “History of the Spice Trade.” silkroadspices.ca/pages/history-of-the-spice-trade.
Tim Williams. “Mapping the Silk Roads.” ResearchGate, www.researchgate.net/profile/Tim-Williams-24/publication/280096308_Mapping_the_Silk_Roads/links/5716665b08aeefeb022c36a3/Mapping-the-Silk-Roads.pdf.
UNESCO. “What Are Spice Routes?” UNESCO, en.unesco.org/silkroad/content/what-are-spice-routes.
No annotations – some sources aren’t complete (Aj, Sachin & Nayaka, V S & Kalal, Prashant & Sanikommu, Vijay Rakesh Reddy. (2023). spices route and trade. )
Some don’t link to anything (Creighton University. “Silk Road GIS Mapping Project.” ArcGIS Online, creighton.maps.arcgis.com/apps/mapviewer/index.html?panel=gallery&suggestField=true&layers=9f27e53937994ce488ed775557a8da7b.)
Many aren’t scholarly (ex. Flavor and Fortune. “Several Sources State that Cumin Originated in the Middle East and China, Some Say ‘Cumin Came from India.’” http://www.flavorandfortune.com/ffdataaccess/article.php?ID=467#:~:text=Several%20sources%20state%20that%20cumin,say%20’cumin%20came%20from%20India.)
You have a clear path based on our discussion, but I don’t see much in the way of a rigorous finetuning of your strategy to begin focusing this project.
It also isn’t clear what is data here and what are your secondary sources. If you’d like to revise to recoup some credit, feel free.