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The Beginnings of Human Society

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Stone Age a period of time during which humans made lasting tools and weapons ... The New Stone Age first began in Southwest Asia. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Beginnings of Human Society


1
The Beginnings of Human Society
  • Chapter 1, Section 2 pgs. 12-19
  • Prehistory
  • TN SPI 6.2.3, 6.3.5, 6.5.2

2
Objectives
  • Discover how hunter-gatherers lived during the
    Stone Age.
  • Learn about the beginning of farming.

3
Key Terms
  • Stone Age a period of time during which humans
    made lasting tools and weapons mainly from stone
  • Nomad a person who has no settled home
  • Domesticate to adapt wild plants or tame wild
    animals and to breed them for human use

4
Stone Age Hunting and Gathering
  • Stone Age a period of time when humans made
    lasting tools mainly from stone
  • Tools were also made of wood and animal bones.
  • Scientists think the Stone Age lasted for
    thousands of years.

5
Objectives
  • Discover how hunter-gatherers lived during the
    Stone Age.
  • Learn about the beginning of farming.

6
Stone Age
  • Archaeologists (scientists who examine objects to
    learn about the past) divide the Stone Age into
    three periods
  • Old Stone Age
  • Middle Stone Age
  • New Stone Age

7
Old Stone Age
  • During the Old Stone Age
  • Humans had not yet learned to farm
  • They were hunters and gatherers
  • They survived by hunting animals and eating from
    wild plants
  • Men were hunters Women were gatherers
  • Most of Prehistory occurred during the Old Stone
    Age.

8
Fire !
  • Fire was discovered during the Old Stone Age.
  • Even though it was discovered by man, it has
    always been around.
  • No one knows for sure how. ??
  • Perhaps lightning caused a fire??
  • At first they were most likely terrified by fire,
    but they learned to keep it going.
  • Fire could ward off dangerous
  • animals.

9
Fire !
  • Early humans learned to create fire by rubbing
    two sticks together, or by striking stones to
    produce a spark.
  • This was sometime around 7000 B.C.
  • The ability to create fire was an important
    discovery.
  • This allowed humans to move to areas with colder
    climates.

10
Settling New Areas
  • Evidence suggests that early humans migrated from
    homes in Africa to Southwest Asia, then to Europe
    and other parts of the world.
  • Asia and Europe 500,000 years ago
  • Crossed from Asia to North America 30,000 years
    ago
  • South America by 10,000 B.C.

11
(No Transcript)
12
Middle Stone Age
  • This era in time is characterized by the use of
    more advanced tools.
  • Used bows and arrows
  • Used domesticated dogs to help in hunting
  • Flint tools were used for working wood and bone
  • Ate nuts, roots, and berries

13
New Stone Age
  • The New Stone Age began with the discovery that
    planted seeds would produce new plants.
  • The New Stone Age first began in Southwest Asia.
  • Humans no longer had to be nomads, but they still
    depended on stone tools.

14
Stone Age
  • Each era of the Stone Age was not successive.
  • In different parts of the world the Old and
    Middle Stone Ages continued for thousands of
    years.
  • Some Stone Age societies even existed into the
    1900s.

15
Pastoral Nomads
  • At the same time people began to grow their own
    food, others raised livestock and traveled from
    place to place in search of grazing areas for
    their animals.
  • Pastoral Nomads still exist today in places such
    as Iraq and Syria.

16
Domestication
  • Humans learned to tame animals for their own use.
  • Sheep, goats, and pigs provided milk, meat, wool,
    and skins.
  • By 2500 B.C., cattle, horses, and donkeys were
    trained to carry heavy loads.
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