Hominids and Hunter- Gatherers. Investigating prehistory Historians rely on written records- Did hominids write? Archaeologists- study/analyze material.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
EARLY HUMANS.
Advertisements

Chapter 2 – The Stone Ages and Early Cultures
Chapter 2 – The Stone Ages and Early Cultures
The First People Preview
Human Origins in Africa
Early Humans Copyright © Clara Kim All rights reserved.
Foundations of Civilization
Early Human Life.
Prehistory is the time before there were written records.
Paleolithic and Neolithic Age
Also known as “Pre-History”
Human Origins in Africa
Hominids and Hunter-Gatherers
Thought of the Day Imagine you were living in the Prehistoric Ages. Describe 5 major items you think you would need in order to survive, and explain why.
CLASSIC PHOTO ALBUM. Archaeologists : learn about people by studying traces of early settlement such as bones and artifacts (jewelry, clothes, tools).
Human Origins.
Lesson 1:.
The First People Chapter 2.1 Notes.
The First Humans. 65 Million Years Ago DinosaursDinosaurs died out app 65 million years ago. The first human like hominids did not appear until around.
Discovery of Early Humans in Africa
FOCUS 1 Notes Human Origins In Africa. No written records of prehistoric peoples Prehistory dates back to 5,000 years ago.
The Stone Ages and Early Cultures UNIT 1. Prehistory is the time before written records were kept. Because these people didn’t write down their history.
Next Copyright © by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company Chapter 2 World History: Ancient Civilizations Through the Renaissance The First People.
Why Study History? HISTORY: Helps Us Understand People and Societies Helps Us Understand Change and How the Society We Live in Came to Be Gives Importance.
Holt McDougal, The First People The Big Idea Prehistoric people learned to adapt to their environment, to make simple tools, to use fire, and to use language.
The Stone Age. Genus Homo Most artifacts found in this era were made of stone that is how this era came by it’s name Humans living during the Stone Age.
The Physical Evolution of Humans
Early Humans Copyright © Clara Kim All rights reserved.
The First People Humans, similar to, but not exactly as we know them today, have been around for about 1,000,000 years. Hominids however, or early ancestors.
THE STONE AGES AND EARLY CULTURES CHAPTER 2. THE FIRST PEOPLE Humans on earth over 1 million years Writing has only existed about 5000 years Time before.
Homework Complete H.W. #3 on the assignment sheet for tomorrow. First current events article due September 18.
Early Humans Copyright © Clara Kim All rights reserved.
Chapter 1 The First Humans
Chapter 2 / Section 1 The First People.
Chapter 2: Prehistoric People BC Page 32.
Early Human Migration. Answers 1. What happened during the Ice Age? About 1.6 million years ago, many places around the world began to experience long.
The First People The Big Idea
BY Alessandro Miele and Kyle Gray. Hominid- Early ancestors of humans that developed in Africa. Hunter and gatherers- Early people that hunted animals.
ArcheologyEarly HumansEarly Societies Human Migration
Early Man.
Hunter-Gatherer Socieities
WHI.2 Development of Humankind through the Agricultural Revolution.
The Rise of Humans The Scientific Account of Human Origins from 4 Million B.C. to 8000 B.C.
Paleolithic Era (The Old Stone Age)
Early Hominids Australopithecus aferensis LUCY.
By: Jared. First People Hominids Earliest ancestors of humans Roamed earth about 4-5 million years ago Homo Habilis Roamed Africa 2.4 million years ago.
HOMINIDS. Australopithecus Afarensis “Lucy”
The Stone Ages and Early Cultures Mr. Perkins Fall 2015.
SOL 2 Paleolithic Era to Agricultural Revolution.
The Stone Age and Early Cultures
PLEASE DO NOT touch the numbers on your desk! You will find out what they are for momentarily. Please sit quietly and wait for further instructions. BELL.
The Stone Age A time When things. Vocabulary PrehistoryMigrate HominidIce Ages AncestorLand Bridge ToolMesolithic Era Paleolithic EraNeolithic Era Society.
Paleolithic Era to Agricultural Revolution
Early Humans & Paleolithic Age
Hominids 101 (WH.2). What does Prehistory mean? Time before humans wrote down or recorded records of past events!
Ancient Civilizations Ch. 1-1 Prehistory-300 B.C. Understanding Our Past.
Lesson 2.1 The First People. Scientist Study Remains Historians call the time before writing was invented as prehistory. Writing originated only 5,000.
Prehistory.
Chapter 2.1 Learning Goal Describe how tools and the use of fire helped early human societies. Why it matters: Learning to use tools and fire helped hunter-gatherer.
The Physical Evolution of Humans
The First People Preview
The First People Preview
Human Origins in Africa
Early Man Jeopardy Final Jeopardy $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $200 $200
Early Man.
Chapter 2 – The Stone Ages and Early Cultures
The Stone Ages and Early Cultures
Unit 1: The Beginnings of Civilizations 4 Million B.C.-200B.C.
EARLY HOMINIDS.
Presentation transcript:

Hominids and Hunter- Gatherers

Investigating prehistory Historians rely on written records- Did hominids write? Archaeologists- study/analyze material remains like tools, pottery, weapons, clothing, jewelry Anthropologists- study bones of our ancestors and their culture (way of life, beliefs, values, practices)

Early Hominids Australopithecus- 4 million years BC –S/E Africa –500 cm³ brain size –First hominid to walk upright Homo Habilis- “handy man”, 2.5 million years BC 700 cm³ brain size E Africa First to make stone tools

Early Hominids Homo Erectus- “upright man”, 1.6 million years BC –Africa, Asia, Europe –1,000 cm³ brain size –First to ??? Neanderthal- 200,000-30,000 BC, Europe and SW Asia, 1,450 cm³ brain, first to have ritual burials

Early Hominids Cro-Magnon- Homo Sapiens- 40,000 (or 150,000) to 8,000 BC –Europe –Brain size 1,400 cm³ brain size –Fully modern humans –First to create art, more organized

museum/hominid/australopithicus/australo pithicus.shtmlhttp:// museum/hominid/australopithicus/australo pithicus.shtml

Hunter-Gatherers Mode of Production- the way goods and services are produced, used, and traded Hunter-Gatherers- nomads who obtained food, clothes, shelter from plants and animals

The Bering Strait today

Land Bridge quicktime beringlandbridge1l.mov

Hunter-Gatherers They hunted wooly mammoths, elk, reindeer, musk oxen, wooly rhinos, saber- toothed tigers, etc They hunted with stone spear tips called Clovis points

Clovis points

Stone Axe

Folsom Point

Darts and Fish hook

Animals

Shelter