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Early Human History

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Early Human History ... Life in Paleolithic Age ... Civic 6_Civic 7_Civic 8_Civic 9_Civic 10_Civic 11_Civic Early Human History I. The Stone Age I ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Early Human History


1
Early Human History
Paleolithic art from Lascaux, France.
2
I. The Stone Age
  • Stone Age split into three distinct periods
  • Paleolithic (Old Stone) Age roughly 2 million
    years ago until 12,000 B.C.E.
  • Mesolithic (Middle Stone) Age about 12,000 to
    8,000 B.C.E.
  • Neolithic (New Stone) Age about 8,000 to 3,000
    B.C.E.
  • Life during Paleolithic age
  • Simple tool use (sticks, stones of varying shapes
    and sizes)
  • Nomads highly mobile, moved from place to place
    looking for food
  • Hunter-gatherers depended on hunting animals
    and collecting foods
  • Humans evolved to what we are today Homo sapiens
    sapiens
  • Originated about 240,000 years ago in Africa

3
I. continued
  • Life in Paleolithic Age continued
  • Population growth was slow hunter-gatherer way
    of life cannot support large groups
  • Late Paleolithic development of culture
  • A peoples unique way of life helps explain the
    environment and rules for social behavior
  • Development of complex languages and speech
  • Entire world is populated by end of Paleolithic
    Age
  • Developments in the Mesolithic Age
  • Last great Ice Age ends, living conditions
    improve for most of the Northern Hemisphere
  • Human progress accelerates tools, weapons
    become more sophisticated
  • Food storage, animal domestication (taming)
    begins
  • Population growth accelerated

4
II. Neolithic Revolution
  • Between 10,000 and 12,000 years ago, agriculture
    (farming) began
  • This is called the Neolithic (or Agricultural)
    Revolution
  • Took thousands of years to spread from Middle
    East (Fertile Crescent) to rest of world
  • Many groups began by practicing an early
    agriculture technique called slash-and-burn
    farming
  • Cut and burned vegetation to clear a field
    allowed to grow back after a year or two, once
    farmers have moved on
  • Further domestication of animals horses, dogs,
    goats, pigs, sheep, camels

5
II. Continued
  • Neolithic Revolution paves way for permanent
    settlements
  • Agriculture allowed larger groups to live in one
    place
  • Catal Huyuk
  • A Neolithic Age village, founded about 7,000
    B.C.E. in modern-day Turkey
  • Population was in the thousands
  • Specialized workers and cultural life flourished
  • Drawbacks natural disasters, diseases, warfare
    were common problems or people live closely
    together
  • Neolithic Revolution comic

6
III. Civilization
  • Permanent settlements, like Catal Huyuk, led to
    emergence of civilization
  • Societies that rely on agriculture, produce food
    surpluses
  • Have formal political organization
  • Characterized by groups of non-farming elites,
    merchant and manufacturing groups, specialized
    workers
  • Development of writing
  • Essential to civilization for communication,
    record keeping, establishment of law and order
  • Cuneiform first system of writing, emerged in
    Middle East around 3500 B.C.E.

7
IV. End of Stone Age
  • Bronze Age
  • Emergence of civilizations also brought about the
    end of the Stone Age
  • Bronze Age began around 3000 B.C.E. with the
    widespread use of bronze (type of metal) tools

8
Key Vocabulary Chapter 1 (Part 1)
  • Paleolithic (Old Stone) Age
  • Homo sapiens sapiens
  • Neolithic (New Stone) Age
  • Neolithic Revolution
  • Hunting and gathering
  • Bronze Age
  • Slash and burn agriculture
  • Bands
  • Catal Huyuk
  • Civilization
  • Cuneiform
  • Nomads
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