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BELL-RINGER
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Converging Cultures CHAPTER 1
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The Migration to America
Section 1
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When did the first people arrive in America?
At least 10,000 years ago Perhaps 15, ,000 years ago Scientific Studies DNA, Skulls, Bones, Teeth, C-14 Dating VOCABULARY: Ice Age, Glaciers, Nomads
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Early American Civilizations
Agricultural Revolution: 9,000 – 10,000 years ago Mesoamerica First Crops: Maize, Pumpkins, Peppers, Squash, & Beans
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Mesoamerica Olmec Teotihuacán Southern Mexico, 1500-300 BC
Built large villages, temples, and pyramids Teotihuacán About 300 BC – 650 AD First large City in America near today’s Mexico City
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Mesoamerica Mayan Yucatan Peninsula then into Central America, 200 AD
Talent for Engineering and Mathematics Created accurate calendars and built huge cities Around 900 AD, they abandoned their cities for unknown reasons Possibly invaded, or they could have experienced a famine
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Mesoamerica Aztec Central Mexico
Tenochtitlán – 1325 – Today’s Mexico City By the 1500s, about 5 MILLION people lived under Aztec rule.
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Mesoamerica
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The American Southwest
Hohokam 300 AD - Present-day south central Arizona Devised irrigation canals (Gila & Salt Rivers) Corn, cotton, & beans Began to abandon their lands in the 1300s (floods)
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The American Southwest
Anasazi 700 AD Four Corners Farmed the harsh desert Pueblos Drought ~ 1130 AD Cliff Palace, Mesa Verde National Park
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Mound Builders North America’s Eastern Woodlands Hopewell 200-100 BC
Huge, geometric earthworks.
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Mound Builders Cahokia AD Near STL 16,000 people Collapse
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Native American Cultural Diversity
The Far North The Pacific The Southwest The Great Plains The Eastern Woodlands
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The Far North Inuit Aleut Alaska to Greenland
Alaska’s Aleutian Islands
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The Far North Inuit & Aleut
Hunted seals, walruses, whales, polar bears, & caribou Invented ingenious devices to cope with harsh environment Harpoon Kayak Dogsled
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The Pacific Southeastern Alaska to Washington state
Kwakiutls & Chinook – Fished Cascade Range to Rocky Mountains Nez Perce, Yakima – Fished, hunted, gathered berries Sierra Nevada to Rocky Mountains Ute & Shoshone
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The Southwest Zuni & Hopi – Farmers 1500s – Apache & Navajo arrived
Believed in the spirit world (kachinas) 1500s – Apache & Navajo arrived Apache – hunters Navajo – farmers
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The Great Plains Practiced agriculture until about 1500
Became nomadic hunters & followed the buffalo Tamed horses brought by the Spanish
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The Eastern Woodlands East of MS River and South of Great Lakes
Environment supported abundant range of plant and animal life Most hunted, fished, and farmed
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The Eastern Woodlands Iroquois – New York Slash-and-burn Agriculture
Longhouses Often Fought
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The Eastern Woodlands Keeping Peace
Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, Oneida, & Mohawk formed an alliance
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What do you know? Using the map on page 14, answer the following questions: What was the main food source for the Northwest? Why were the Great Plains peoples nomadic?
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Europe & Africa Section 2
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European Society Roman Empire collapsed by 500 AD
Western Europe became isolated from the world Middle Ages ( )
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Feudalism Developed in W. Europe
The King gave estates to nobles in exchange for their loyalty and military support. Peasants (usually serfs) worked for feudal lords in exchange for protection. Manorialism
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Expanding Horizons 1000 AD – W. European economy began to improve
Food Surplus (plows) Islam – Middle East & Africa ( ) Won converts through conquest & brotherhood European Christians feared losing the Holy Land Pope Urban II urged Christians to fight for their sacred states CRUSADES
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Expanding Horizons THE CRUSADES:
Consisted of 9 expeditions over the next 200 years Changed western European society Broke down feudalism & increased king’s authority Brought Europeans into contact with Muslim and Byzantine civilizations Trade flourished Rising economy and demand for gold By the 1300s, Europe was importing vast quantities of luxury goods from Asia.
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New States, New Technology
Water route to Asia – motive but no means
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