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Published byHector Wilkins Modified over 8 years ago
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Agricultural Revolution or Neolithic Rev. – Second great human endeavor after the settlement of the globe Started about 12,000 years ago Deliberate cultivation of plants and domestication (taming) of animals Transformed human life across the globe
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How did agriculture bring a new relationship between humans and other living things? – Shaped the landscape i.e. canals, slash and burn, dams – Selectively bred animals/ dogs-hunting, oxen- plowing
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Domestication of nature created a new mutual dependence – Many plants and animals began to rely on humans – Humans lost gathering and hunting skills
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Intensification of living or the getting of more food and resources from less land – May result in exploitation of resources More food led to greater population increase
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Happened independently in China, New Guinea, Mesoamerica, the Andes, Eastern North America Same time, 12,000-4,000 years ago
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Common patterns: End of the Ice Age 16,000 years ago. By 11,000 years ago completely over – End of Ice Age led to human migrations – Warmer, more stable climates- plants flourish, new food sources such as cereal grasses
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The natural world became one to manage – Broad spectrum diet developed. Humans ate large and small animals with expanded plants. – Tools developed to address agriculture Sickles, baskets, developed to for new grains in the Middle East Women were probably the agricultural innovators Clearing, slash and burn
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Permanent villages – Population growth then food crisis – Only a few hundred plant species have been domesticated and only fourteen large mammal species
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Fertile Crescent- - first Agricultural Revolution – Domesticated plants and animals – Mud bricks = more sophisticated building, shrines, homes, burial sites
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Eastern Sahara Domestication (Sudan) – Region more hospitable 10,000-5,000 years ago. Sahara did not exist – Domesticated cattle 1,000 years before Middle east and India – Less productive agriculturally in Africa than in Fertile Crescent
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Americas – Absence of animals to domesticate. – Without the protein from animals and manure to fertilize people of the western Hemisphere (Americas) relied on hunting and fishing – Only cereal grain was maize or corn Agricultural development took longer Americas are oriented north south across different climate zones slowing trade and diffusion
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Globalization of Agriculture – Spreads in two ways Diffusion- gradual spread of techniques but without much movement of people Colonization or migration of agricultural people
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Language and culture spread with agriculture – Indo-European languages started in Turkey and today spoken from Europe to India – Similar in China – Spread of Bantu language in southern Africa – Austronesians in the Pacific
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Agriculture took 10,000 years to globalize. – Was resisted where land was poor or resources were great – By the beginning of the Common Era most gathering/ hunting societies were a minority
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The Culture of Agriculture – Greater populations 10,000 years ago 6 million 5,000 years ago 50 million people Common Era 250 million
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Farming did not improve life – People were shorter and lived shorter lives than gathering societies – Difficult work, sickness due to animal born disease, dependence on climate and rainfall meant droughts and famine – Larger populations led to epidemics
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New technologies: – Pots, textiles, and metallurgy – Secondary products revolution 4,000 BCE: New uses for domesticated animals other than meat and hides: fertilizer, milk wool, beasts of burden to haul and plow Only in Eastern hemisphere
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Deliberate alteration of the ecosystem – Removal of ground cover, irrigation and grazing taxes and ecosystem – Evidence of soil erosion and deforestation in the Middle East 1,000 years after
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Reliance on different animals in different regions – Horses were domesticated by 4,000 BCE Encouraged the growth of pastoral (pasture animals) people on the central Asian steppes
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Social variation – Pastoral societies- Animal husbandry or raising of animals for milk, meat or blood – Pastoral societies Nomadic,began in Central Asia, Arabian Peninsula and parts of eastern and southern Africa Land did not lend itself to agriculture Must pasture animals-cover more land
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Domesticated camels allowed human life in the inner Asian, Arabian and Saharan deserts No pastoral societies emerged in the Americas
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Agricultural Village Societies – Banpo and Jericho were early villages that maintained an egalitarian (equal) society – Catalhuyuk in southern Turkey Buried dead under houses, moved on rooftops, specialized crafts, little sign of inherited social inequality and no gender dominance
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Village-based agricultural societies organized by kinship group or lineage – Functions of government by maintaining order but did not have chiefdoms. – Goal: good for all Sometimes inequalities existed – Elders taking advantage of the young for labor – Controlling the reproduction of women to maintain lineage
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Chiefdoms Chiefs unlike kings relied on generosity, ritual status, or charisma to govern, not force Goal: common good Later birth right would influence chief then kinks of civilizations and states Chiefdoms emerged in Mesopotamia
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