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Published byAudrey Conley Modified over 9 years ago
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PREHISTORIC HUMANS & THE RISE OF CIVILIZATION
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HUMAN EVOLUTION EVOLUTION: species change into new species through adaption, natural selection, and competition over time. Australopithecus Homo habillis Homo erectus Homo sapiens
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OUT OF AFRICA
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STONE AGE VOCABULARY Hunting and Gathering: surviving by foraging for food and resources from nature and hunting animals for meat, hides, and bones Nomads: people that move from place to place in search of food/resources; no permanent settlements
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STONE AGE VOCABULARY Domestication: to train or adapt a plant or animal to be useful to humans Surplus: extra food/resources that can be saved for later use which allows people to do jobs other than produce food Job Specialization: due to a food surplus some people have enough time to become experts in certain jobs; leads to professionals, new technology, and rise of civilization
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STONE AGE VOCABULARY Metallurgy: techniques of changing, molding and shaping metals into tools or weapons.
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PALEOLITHIC AGE ECONOMY Hunting and gathering for food and resources No major animal or plant domestication Hard to store food for later use
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PALEOLITHIC AGE TECHNOLOGY Simple stone tools Fire CULTURE Cave paintings, carvings, figurines NO writing systems
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PALEOLITHIC AGE SOCIETY Nomadic lifestyle NO permanent settlements NO division of labor NO gender roles: men and women worked together performing similar tasks Small clans (extended family groups)
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NEOLITHIC AGE
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ECONOMY Domestication of animals and plants Farming & herding replaces foraging Pastoral economy – some Neolithic peoples mainly herded animals & did not farm Pottery was used to store food The dog was the first domesticated animal
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NEOLITHIC AGE TECHNOLOGY Complex stone tools Invention of metallurgy Metal tools and weapons used CULTURE Jewelry Sculptures Decorative pots Stone monuments
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NEOLITHIC AGE SOCIETY Permanent villages with informal leadership (chiefs or elders) to supervise farming, judge disputes and defense Job specialization Male dominance (patriarchal) – different jobs for each sex Better food production – population growth – larger and more complex settlements
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The Road to Civilization How did civilizations develop? PALEOLITHIC SOCIETIES Civilization Agriculture development Villages develop in river valleys Successful villages grew into cities with a government to organize agriculture & other communal activities Surpluses lead to population growth, job specialization, trade, and city-states
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What is a Civilization? Comes from the Latin word, civitas, meaning city A complex society with enough economic surplus to form divisions of labor and a social hierarchy; a society sharing a set of cultural traits First developed in river valleys
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Characteristics of a CIVILIZATION
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Where did Early Civilizations Develop? River Valleys Lands around a river Rivers provide water and periodically flood depositing silt which re-fertilizes the land Best for agriculture
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