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Americas. Environmental Management Bering Strait to Americas Hunter/gatherers Late 15 th century: domestication of plants Densely populated settlements.

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Presentation on theme: "Americas. Environmental Management Bering Strait to Americas Hunter/gatherers Late 15 th century: domestication of plants Densely populated settlements."— Presentation transcript:

1 Americas

2 Environmental Management Bering Strait to Americas Hunter/gatherers Late 15 th century: domestication of plants Densely populated settlements (Mesoamerica and western South America) Chinampas (floating gardens) Terraced hills in Andes Mountains Corn and potatoes not labor-intensive

3 Olmec Oldest civilization in Americas-all later Mesoamerican civilization derived from them Our knowledge based on archeology Based on agriculture Spread over central Mexico Built scattered ceremonial centers After 1500 bce developed hierarchical societies

4 Olmec Society Aristocrats lived in large cities with palaces, plazas, temples, ball courts, water reservoirs, and carved stone drains Monumental stone structures Human sacrifice practiced at sacred ceremonial sites 900 bce San Lorenzo, center of Olmec civilization, was destroyed

5 Olmec Great Pyramid La Venta in Mexico Center of Olmec religion Required estimated 800,000 man hours to build Around 300 bce La Venta fell

6 Maya Sophisticated system of writing Most accurate calendar of any civilization at the time Advances in mathematics

7 Background of Maya Group that emigrated from northern Oregon to the western highlands of Guatemala Cholans and Tzeltalans moved into the Yucatan peninsula Cholan-speaking Maya created the culture

8 Key features of Maya culture Agriculture was basis of support Staple crop was maize Raised, narrow, rectangular plots for growing Milpa system-burn down trees and plant in the ashes (only productive for 2 years) Agriculture supported large populations (up to 14 million) Population centers lacked industry—they were ceremonial centers

9 Maya Economy Fairs that accompanied ceremonies Items of value: jade, obsidian, beads of red spiny oyster shell, lengths of cloth, and cacao Extensive trade promoted common language and unity, along with common sense of identity Long-distance trading based on trade of “gifts” by aristocratic ambassadors

10 Maya Technology Transportation: canoes on rivers and swamps Wide roads Hieroglyphic writing with 850 characters Recorded chronology, religion, and astronomy in books made of bark paper and deerskin Inscriptions on steles=historical documents Vigesimal math (based on 20, not 10) Abstract knowledge

11 Maya Warfare Wars fought for land, slaves, avenge insults and punish theft, control trade routes and sources of valued products like salt Famine led to wars

12 Collapse Between 8 th and 10 th centuries Maya abandoned population centers and their civilization collapsed Reasons: land exhaustion, drought, overpopulation, disease, and constant wars

13 Teotihuacan and Toltec People from east and south of Valley of Mexico Great commercial and ceremonial center Center of Teotihuacan stood Pyramids of Sun and Moon Artisans lived in barrios at edge of town Toltec was heir to Teotihuacan—the people of Toltec intermarried and integrated with people of Teotihuacan

14 Aztec (Mexica) Society Aztecs shared Nahuatl language as Toltecs Aztecs were considered foreign barbarians, had to settle on swampy islands in Lake Texcoco By 1428 they had embarked on expansion By 1519 (when Cortes arrived) they contolled all of central Mexico

15 Aztec Economy Strong mercantile class made luxury items available: cotton, feathers, cocoa, skins, turquoise, gold

16 Aztecs and War Aztecs attributed their success to their god Huitzilopochtli, god of war Kings ordered war to acquire tribute and captives for sacrifice Fighting was pathway to social advancement Military service was shared (men called up by city wards) King planned battle, route, and travel plans

17 Aztec Attack Priests led the army Object city was warned of imminent attack; if surrendered, tribute was modest (compared to being attacked) Aztec strategy was to encircle the enemy Goal was not to kill the enemy but to get him to provide tribute or to use him for sacrificial victim

18 Aztec religion Religion shaped everything, and war was an article of faith Huitzilopochtli symbolized the sun, who had to be kept moving (fed blood by human sacrifice) Sociological reasons for human sacrifice? Mexica religion destroyed the economic basis of the empire

19 A Human Moment How did conquered people respond to the Aztecs?

20 Incas Archeology shows ruins older than those of the Maya and Aztecs Located in Andes mountains of western South America

21 Moche Valley 100 and 800 ce Rivers allowed for irrigation Large ceremonial centers with palaces and pyramids Expert at metalworking

22 Inca social organization Grew in valleys in the Andes Mountains 2500 bce lived on fish and mussels; cotton for clothing 200 bce Andean people made several leaps in lifestyle, creating vertical archipelagoes Potatoes as basis of diet Coca leaves used to build stamina

23 Inca rule Inca ruler considered descended from sun-god Dead rulers linked people to sun-god Treated as still-present rulers Mummies brought out for ceremonies and human sacrifices made to mummies “Cult of royal mummies” Dead retained full rights over property

24 Inca government Ruled by imperial unification Imposed religion and language Forced relocation called “mitima”

25 Fall of Inca Overextension Huascar and Atauhualpa contested throne in 1525 Huascar was the legitimate heir; ordered that dead rulers should be buried and their lands consolidated Led to civil war; nobles (who managed dead rulers’ lands) backed Atauhualpa On the way to coronation Atauhualpa met Pizarro-Spaniards took over

26 North America Mound Builders (Ohio, Mississippi) People of wooded northwest Pacific Iroquois of northeast Tribes of southeast Plains Indians


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