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Introduction to Early Humans: The Flintstones

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1 Introduction to Early Humans: The Flintstones
Clip #1 Clip #2 Clip 1: Flintstones Cartoon(0050) Clip 2: Flintstones Real movies(0051)

2 Class Questions Do you remember this show? What was this show about?
Are there any historical inaccuracies in this show?

3 65 Million Years Ago No matter what you may have seen in the movies, early man did not live during the same period in history as dinosaurs! Dinosaurs died out about 65 million years ago. The first humans did not appear until around 3 million years ago.

4 Very Early Humans There was a difference between apes and man. Early human-like hominids could stand upright. Apes could not. Their hands were different, too. - Ape hands were made for climbing and clinging. - Man’s hands were jointed differently, which allowed them to make and use tools. Video Clip- You tube- “Chimpanzee Human-like behavior montage”

5 Very Early Humans Lucy told them!
How do scientists know about an early man who lived 3 million years ago? Lucy told them!

6 Lucy In 1974, a skeleton was found in Africa. The bones were those of a female, about 20 years old or so when she died. Scientists named her Lucy. About 3 million years ago, when Lucy was alive, she was about 3’’4’ tall and weighed about 50 pounds. Scientists suspect that she fell into a lake or river and drowned. Scientists are like detectives. They can tell a great deal from a skeleton, whether it's one year old or 3 million years old!

7 Fossils & Artifacts Scientists use many clues to help them put pieces of the past together. One thing they must know is the difference between a fossil and an artifact. Fossils are remains of the living (plants, animals, people), not things that were made. Artifacts are remains of things that were made, not remains of living things.

8 Handy Man The Stone Age refers to the materials used to make man-made tools. In the Stone Age, man made tools out of stone. “Handy Man” was one of the first hominids to use stone tools. Hunters & Gatherers: The Old Stone Age people were hunters/gatherers. We know this because scientists have found fossils and artifacts, which reveal traces of their life. These people did not plant crops. They gathered wild fruits, nuts, berries, and vegetables.

9 Homo Habilis “Handy Man”
These early human-like hominids were taller and smarter than Lucy’s people, but they did not know how to make fire. When they broke camp, they probably tried to bring fire with them by carrying lit branches to use to start a new campfire. If their branches went out, they did without fire until they found something burning.

10 Homo Erectus “Upright Man”
Many years passed. Another group of man was born. Scientists nicknamed this group “Upright Man”. Upright Man did know how to make fire. That changed everything! People began to cook their food, which helped to reduce disease. People collected around the fire each night, to share stories of the day's hunt and activities, which helped to develop a spirit of community.

11 Upright Man These Stone Age people were about the same size as modern humans. Their tool-making skills were considerably improved. Their weapons included stone axes and knives. Because Upright Man could make fire, he was free to move about in search of food. He did not have to worry about freezing. He made warm clothes from animal skins. At night, he built a campfire to cook his food and to stay warm.

12 Man Leaves Home About one million years ago, Upright Man began to slowly leave Africa. These early people began to populate the world. They did not need a boat. The Ice Age was here! They traveled across giant walkways of frozen ice, over what later would become vast rivers and seas. Scientists have found artifacts of their tools and weapons, which help us to understand how they lived, where they went, and how they got there.

13 Neanderthals One day, scientists found a new skeleton. This skeleton was from another group of early men. Scientists named this man Neanderthal man, after the valley in which the skeleton had been found. Scientists announced that these early men were dim-witted brutes, who walked with bent knees, with their heads slung forward on their big necks. Could these early people really be our ancestors?

14 Neanderthals But scientists had made a mistake!
The bones were bent because they were part of the skeleton of an old man suffering from arthritis! Arthritis is a disease that bends and cripples bones.

15 Neanderthals Still, Neanderthals were different from other species of early humans. They were tall and smart, and used caves as their homes. They were great hunters. Considering how smart they were, and how advanced for their time, scientists are puzzled that the Neanderthals were one of the early species of man to die out. Many species of man died out in these early days. But why the Neanderthals? It is a history mystery.

16 Cro-Magnon Man Another group of early men stood out during this period. Scientists nicknamed this group “Cro-Magnon man”. Cro-Magnon man lived in Europe. This group did not live a life of constant struggle for survival because they worked together to provide food for their tribe.

17 Cro-Magnon Man These Stone Age people learned to cure and store food for the long winter. They used traps, which allowed them to catch food while they were busy doing something else. Fisherman used nets woven from vines and fishhooks. Some groups built rafts and canoes to catch bigger fish in deeper waters. They made clothing and jewelry. They invented the bow and arrow.

18 Cave Paintings Cro-Magnon man did something rather unusual. For some reason, he drew paintings deep inside dark caves, on cave walls. His paintings were added to the paintings already on the cave walls, left by other Cro-Magnon men. Over time, a cave might accumulate hundreds of paintings. Colors used most often were brown, yellow/tan, dark red, and coal black.

19 Cave Paintings Animals were well drawn and filled in with natural colors to give them even more shape and substance. They drew stick figures for hunters. They drew stencils of hands.

20 Lascaux France The existence of cave paintings was discovered by accident. Around 1940, during World War II, some kids were playing in a field in Lascaux, France. They stumbled across a cave entrance. It had been hidden by the tree roots. The walls were covered with cave paintings! Teacher Notes: Caves with paintings in them have been found in many parts of the world. There are probably more caves to be discovered. Once people knew the paintings existed, they looked for more such caves, and found them.

21 Early Humans Questions What is a hunter-gatherer? What is a Stone Age?
Why was the ability to make fire so important? How could early humans travel from Africa to Australia without a boat? What did Cro-Magnon man paint on cave walls? Why did Cro-Magnon man paint on cave walls? Answers: Someone who gathers food growing wild, and hunts for food. A time in history when tools were made from stone Fire helped people survive. Fire was a source of heat, to stay warm in the Ice Age. Fire let them cook their food, which reduced the incident of disease. The ability to make fire allowed them to live and move about freely, in search of food and shelter, knowing they could relight a fire when needed. It was the Ice Age. They walked. Stick figures of people, well drawn animals, and stencil drawings of human hand prints No one knows. It’s a history mystery. Archaeologists have put many pieces of the past together. But there are many pieces yet to be discovered.

22 The Beginning: Prehistoric Art

23 Paleolithic Period The Paleolithic is a prehistoric era distinguished by the development of stone tools. It covers virtually all of humanity's time on Earth, extending from 2.5 million years ago to the introduction of agriculture around 10,000 BCE.

24 Prehistoric Art - Paleolithic (2 million years ago-13,000 BC.)
Paleolithic or "Old Stone Age" is a term used to define the oldest period in the human history. It began about 2 million years ago.

25 The Earliest Art-i-fact
The Venus of Tan-Tan was found in Morocco. It is 6 centimeters long. Dated between 300,000 and 500,000 BC. Made from quartzite, it was painted with red ochre. It was discovered in 1999, during an archaeological survey by Lutz Fiedler.

26 The Venus of Willendorf was carved from limestone,The figurine was unearthed during the Wachau railway construction in 1908. Venus of Willendorf c. 24,000-22,000 BCE 4 3/8 inches (11.1 cm) high Being both female and nude, she fit perfectly into the patriarchal construction of the history of art. As the earliest known representation

27 FERTILITY GODDESSES VENUS OF WILENDORF 30,000-25,000 BCE
WHAT DO YOU SEE?

28 VENUS LEPUGUE Fertility Cult Statue

29 “Venus” – the ideal woman
Venus de Milo, BC, marble, 6 ½ ft, Ancient Greece The Birth of Venus, Sandro Botticelli, 1485, oil on canvas

30 Today’s ideal woman? If the Venus of Willendorf was discovered today, do you think she would have wound up with the same name?

31 Neolithic Period The Neolithic period, also called New Stone Age, began when men first developed agriculture and settled in permanent villages. It ended with the discovery of bronze. The prime medium of Neolithic art was pottery. Other important artistic expressions were statuary of the universally worshiped Mother Goddess and megalithic stone monuments such as Stonehenge.

32 What are the key characteristics of Neolithic art?
• Created for some functional purpose. • Images of animals looked more human. • It began to be used for ornamentation. • In the cases of architecture art was now created in fixed locations.

33 Neolithic pottery with incised design
As for pottery, it began replacing stone and wood utensils at a rapid pace, and also become more highly decorated.

34 Paradimi. Neolithic vase from Paradimi
Paradimi. Neolithic vase from Paradimi. Clay, one-handled jug with biconical body and tall neck. Dated to ca B.C.

35 Spherical vase from Dimini, Late Neolithic
Spherical vase from Dimini, Late Neolithic. The combination of spirals, curved lines, and polygons decorating the vase are characteristic of Late Neolithic pottery.

36 Ubirr (ca. 40,000?–present) Ancient Aborigines of Australia The art of the Australian Aborigines represents the longest continuously practiced series of artistic traditions anywhere in the world. The site of Ubirr in Arnhem Land, northern Australia, contains one of the most impressive assemblages of Aboriginal rock painting, ranging from the earliest periods to works created within living memory.

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39 Stonehenge What is it? Who built it? Why? Is it art?

40 Stonehenge One of the most famous prehistoric sites in the world.
Located in the English county of Wiltshire. Archaeologists believe the standing stones were erected around 2200 BC.

41 Modern theories speculate that the stones were dragged by roller and sledge from the inland mountains. There they were loaded onto rafts, barges or boats. From this point, so the theory goes, the stones were hauled overland, again approximately 6 miles away. From there, they hauled it 2 miles west to the Stonehenge site.

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43 Trilithons Blue stones Heel stone

44 Source/Museum: Salisbury Plain, Wiltshire England
Title: Stonehenge Date: c. 2750–1500 BCE Source/Museum: Salisbury Plain, Wiltshire England Artist: n/a Title: Stonehenge Medium: n/a Size: n/a Date: c. 2750–1500 BCE Source/Museum: Salisbury Plain, Wiltshire England

45 Cave of Lascaux, France Discovered by four boys in 1940.
Caves are filled with pictographs and petroglyphs of hundreds of animals.

46 Lascaux Caves Lascaux is the setting of a complex of caves in southwestern France famous for its cave paintings. They contain some of the most well-known (Upper Paleolithic) art, dating back to somewhere between 15,000 and 13,000 BC. They consist mostly of realistic images of large animals.

47 Cave System – LASCAUX

48 CAVE PAINTING: LASCAUX

49 There are almost 600 pictures of animals, mostly horses.
Other animals painted are stags, bulls, bison, and ibex. Only one man is painted.

50 CAVE PAINTING STYLE VARIOUS SIZES PROFILE SUPERIMPOSITIONS
NO BACKGROUND FEW HUMAN FIGURES, ABSTRACT FEW SCENES REPRESENTATIONAL AND NON

51 IMAGE OUTLINE

52 Animal Heads

53 COLOR FILL

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55 Painted in yellow on the cave ceiling Lascaux, France, early period, 15,000-13,500 BC
(Dun Horse)

56 Prehistoric Mammoth – Peche Merle

57 CAVE PAINTING: PECHE MERLE

58 Other Prehistoric Signatures

59 Why did they paint the cave? What do the paintings mean?
Just the animals that were around at that time. Instructions on how to hunt or not to hunt. The cave was used for religious ceremonies. Painting were for good luck in hunting. PowerPoint created by Amy J McCray, WKU Anthropology Undergrad

60 Homework Bring a large brown paper bag or a large cardboard box to school. Activity: 1. We will make our own cave paintings as a class. 2. First we will look at some cave paintings produced by Early Man. 3. Than we will take a look at individual symbols used by Early Man. 4. Students will produce their own cave paintings on the brown paper bag/cardboard they brought to class. Answers: Someone who gathers food growing wild, and hunts for food. A time in history when tools were made from stone Fire helped people survive. Fire was a source of heat, to stay warm in the Ice Age. Fire let them cook their food, which reduced the incident of disease. The ability to make fire allowed them to live and move about freely, in search of food and shelter, knowing they could relight a fire when needed. It was the Ice Age. They walked. Stick figures of people, well drawn animals, and stencil drawings of human hand prints No one knows. It’s a history mystery. Archaeologists have put many pieces of the past together. But there are many pieces yet to be discovered.

61 Cave Painting Symbols


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