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The Origins of Domestication and Settled Life
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Transition : Upper Paleolithic to Mesolithic n Upper Paleolithic –40,000 - 10,000 ya –lifestyles –migrations –megafauna –retreat of glaciers
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Transition (cont.) n Mesolithic - “Middle Stone Age” –broad-spectrum food collecting F 14,000-10,000 ya F specialized F sedentarism –technology F microliths
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Transition (cont.) n Reasons for Broad-Spectrum Development –climate –overkill hypothesis –population growth n Sedentarism & Population Growth –ethnographic evidence
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Domestication of Plants & Animals n Impetus for Domestication –population growth –sedentarism –drawbacks of broad-spectrum
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Domestication (cont.) n Neolithic - “New Stone Age” –associated with domestication F cultivation n Evidence of Domestication –plant remains F rachis (or axis) –animal remains
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Theories of Domestication n The Oasis Theory - Childe - 1950’s n Readiness Hypothesis - Braidwood n Population Pressure –Boserup / Binford n Marginal Area - Flannery n Blended Theory
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Domestication in Different Regions n Domestication in the Near East –Fertile Crescent F wheat & barley –types of animals domesticated n Domestication elsewhere in the Old World –China / Southeast Asia / Africa
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Domestication Regionally (cont.) n Domestication in the New World –independent evolution –early domesticated plants –maize (corn) –South American crops –North American crops –animal domestication
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Consequences of the Rise of Food Production n Accelerated Population Growth –birth spacing decreased n Declining Overall Health –evidence : teeth & bones –fewer dietary staples –rise of stratification
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Consequences (cont.) n Elaboration of Material Possessions –houses –furnishings –woven textiles –trade
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