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The Stone Ages and Early Cultures Mr. Perkins Fall 2015
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Glossary Terms prehistory hominid ancestor tool Paleolithic Era society hunter-gatherers
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Prehistory The time before written history Written history has only lasted about 5,000 years Historians rely on archaeological evidence (artifacts & fossils) to recreate this time in history Study early ancestors of humans, or hominids
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Hominids Relatives of modern day humans who lived in the past Bones found in Tanzania in 1959 = 1.5 million years old Bones found in 1974 in Ethiopia = 3 million years ago Bones found in 1994 in Ethiopia = 4.4 million years ago
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Early Hominids Homo sapiens 200,000 years ago Homo erectus 2-1.5 million years ago Homo habilis 2.4 million years ago Australopithecus 4-5 million years ago
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Early Hominids Australopithecus – “southern ape” – stood upright and walked on two legs – brain was ⅓ the size of modern humans Homo habilis – “handy man” – used early stone tools for chopping and scraping – brain was ½ the size of modern humans Homo erectus – “upright man” – used early stone tools like a hand axe – controlled fire – migrated out of Africa to Asia and Europe Homo sapiens – “wise man” – migrated around the world – we are this species! – learned to create fire and use many types of tools – developed languages
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Stone Age Broken into three different eras Paleolithic = “Old Stone” Mesolithic = “Middle Stone” Neolithic = “New Stone“
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Paleolithic Era First part of the Stone Age – https://www.youtube.com/watc h?v=L9AJUo6busg https://www.youtube.com/watc h?v=L9AJUo6busg Lasted until 10,000 years ago People used basic stone tools – Oldest tools found in Tanzania (2.6 million years old) – Tools used to cut food – Used for about 2 million years – Later tools include axe and spear
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Hunter-Gatherers More complex tools = hunting larger animals = hunting parties or societies, a community of people that share a common culture People traveled around for food, water, & shelter (nomads) Stone Age humans survived as hunter-gatherers (people who killed animals and gathered wild fruit to eat)
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Hunter-Gatherers Hunters were men – Chased large animals off cliffs Gatherers were women – Stayed near homes close to kids Societies were different from one another – nomadic/sedentary – agrarian/pastoral – patriarchal/matriarchal – monogamous/polygamous
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Language, Art, & Religion Language – most important Stone Age development – people could work together Art – carvings – cave paintings Religion – buried dead with food/items (https://www.youtube.com/w atch?v=NT8f5t7uH0E)https://www.youtube.com/w atch?v=NT8f5t7uH0E – first examples of religion
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Waiting on the World To Change Climate change around the world – People move to new places Ice Ages – 1.6 million years ago – Frozen ice around the world (http://www.creswell- crags.org.uk/)http://www.creswell- crags.org.uk/ – Ended 10,000 years ago – Land bridge (Asia to North America) Migration – http://www.flickclip.com/flicks/iceage4.html http://www.flickclip.com/flicks/iceage4.html – Humans followed animals – 9,000 B.C. = humans live everywhere except Antarctica
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Adaptation People on one continent were different from others – Ate different food – Lived in different climate Fire – Kept people warm – Animal skins as clothes Shelters – Pit houses – Tents made from animal skin
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Mesolithic Era 10,000 to 5,000 years ago More complex tools – Made from bone and stone – Hooks and fishing spears – Bow and arrow – https://www.youtube.com/wat ch?v=67r2Q_rWYGo https://www.youtube.com/wat ch?v=67r2Q_rWYGo Other tools – Canoes – Pottery – Pets
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Bellringer – 9/1/15 How did humans find food during the Paleolithic/Mesolithic? What effect did the Ice Ages have on human? How did it change their lives?
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Lesson 3 Terms Neolithic Era Domestication Agriculture Megaliths
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What They Left Behind As people migrated, they dropped seeds on the ground. These plants began to grow in places they weren’t native to.
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Neolithic Era Began about 10,000 years ago Began in Southwest Asia – Started to spread across the world afterward – Lasted in other countries longer New tools started to be created
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Tools and Pottery http://www.slideshare.net/emilyvalenza/neoli thic-pinch-pots http://www.slideshare.net/emilyvalenza/neoli thic-pinch-pots Stone beads used for jewelryOldest mask in the world – 7,000 B.C.
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Biggest Changes End of Ice Age brought new plants – Wild barley & wheat in Southwest Asia – People settled where new plants grew People carried seeds and animals around – Domesticated crops & animals, or changed to benefit humans – Domestication of plants is known as agriculture
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Plants & Animals Plants – Shift from food gathering to food producing = Neolithic Revolution First occurred in Southwest Asia Animals – Less hunting – Farmers raised their own animals Cattle, sheep, goats Animals also used for milk, food, wool, and farming
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Less Work = More Play People used less time hunting or searching for fruit – Parents could spend more time with children – Games began to be created – People stayed in one area – Population began to grow larger – More time for religion Built megaliths, or giant religious monuments Elements, animals, and ancestors
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https://www.youtube.com/watch/?v=MYbDJF _gMtw
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Effects of the Neolithic Revolution People ate the same amount – But grew more food Which means they had too much food Overproducing food caused: – Erosion – Flooding – Overpopulation
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