Early Human Migration Moving to America?.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Learning Target: I can identify and explain the important parts of a map. Warm Up: List the 5 themes of geography and explain how each theme is represented.
Advertisements

Early Peoples (Pages 16-19)
Hunters and Gatherers of the World
Quiz 2 Early Civilizations.
The Peopling of the Americas
Bering Land Bridge: Beringia
Critical thinking List one characteristic that makes up a culture? How do you think it began?
Early Human Migration EQ: How did people migrate around the world and learn to adapt to new environments?
Pathway to the Americas.  Main Idea:  It is believed that the first people in the Americas came from Asia during the last Ice Age.
Different Worlds Meet Unit 1. What we will learn... Who are the natives of Mesoamerica? Where did they settle? Why did these great empires fall? Who were.
America – Its Unique Settlement US History - Libertyville HS.
Pathway to the Americas.  Main Idea:  It is believed that the first people in the Americas came from Asia during the last Ice Age.
The First Americans  Who were they?  How did they get here?  When did they arrive?  Where did they come from?
 The process by which humans occupy a territory that they organize and transform according to their needs.
Bering Land Bridge Theory What is a theory? An explanation that is still unproven.
TOPIC: EARLY HUMAN MIGRATION Essential Question: Why did early humans migrate and how?
Great Migration Ice Age Between 2 million-year and 10,000 years ago, Earth experienced long periods of cold climate, known as the Ice Age. During each.
The First Americans The first Americans needed to adapt to their environment in order to survive. The cultures developed by these first Americans reflected.
The First Americans. Unfortunately it is a myth that Christopher Columbus discovered America. He was one of the first Europeans to sail to the Americas.
Bell-work 8/22/13 Hypothesize: How could have humans first arrived in North and South America from other continents without the use of boats? EQ: How.
Theories of First Peoples’ Origins
 By comparing and analyzing artifacts, researchers believe that early people lived in parts of East Africa nearly 3.5 million years ago.  Archaeologists.
The First Americans. The Ice age effects Glaciation – occurs when the Earth’s temperature drops to very low levels and only snow falls not rain.
Beringia: the “Land Bridge” between Asia and America
North America’s First Peoples Early Settlement of North America.
6 th Grade Social Studies Unit 3, Lesson 6 Theories of Migration 1.
Chapter 2-1 Early Human Migration. Bell Work Instructions: Read The Iceman on page 35 and answer the question below.  Why is the The Iceman important?
The Peopling of the Americas. Archaeological evidence suggests that between 50,000 and 13,500 years ago people began to arrive in the Americas.
Theories of the Origins of the First People
ORIGINS- BEGINNINGS PAGE 6 ANSWER KEY. Where do many Canadian History sources tend to think that our nation’s history began? European exploration
The Peopling of Canada The First People.  Aboriginal people and non- aboriginal people have different understandings about the origins of the first people.
Scientific Evidence of Origins
Do Now Record in Agenda: recent picture of you due next class (size 2x3 to 4x6; you shouldn’t be younger than 12 ) Take out 2 clean sheets of notebook.
The First Americans. Anasazi Indians The Anasazi Indians adapted to their environment by building homes in the stone cliffs of the U.S. Southwest.
The Peopling of the Americas How did the First Nations Peoples arrive in North America? What evidence is there to support current theories?
Module 1: The First North Carolinians No reading with this PowerPoint.
Lesson 1 – The first Americans History Alive! P
 Who were they?  How did they get here?  When did they arrive?  Where did they come from?
The First Americans America Before Columbus
Topic: Early Human Migration
The Peopling of the Americas
The First North Americans
Aboriginal Presence: Origins
Theories of First Peoples’ Origins
Please get out your notebook and be ready to take notes.
Settlement of North America
Beringia: the “Land Bridge” between Asia and America
Beringia: the “Land Bridge” between Asia and America
6th Grade Social Studies Unit 3, Lesson 6 Theories of Migration
6th Grade Social Studies Unit 3, Lesson 6 Theories of Migration
Theories of First Peoples’ Origins
Unit 4: Geographic Change
Beringia: the “Land Bridge” between Asia and America
Geography & archaeological theories related to the Aztec, Maya & Inca
North American Indigenous Peoples
Settling the Americas How did we get here, anyway? Competing Theories:
The First Americans Chapter 2 Lesson 1.
Aboriginal Peoples of Canada, 1000 BCE-1600 CE
Migration Theories.
The Journey Out of Africa
The First North Americans
How Did the Early People Get to Texas
The Peopling of the Americas
First Peoples in the Americas
The First North Americans
Theories of First People’s Origins
“I have been here since the world began…”
The Peopling of Canada The First People.
The First Americans Who were they? How did they get here?
Presentation transcript:

Early Human Migration Moving to America?

The least you should know What is the debate over time? What are the pros and cons of each major theory?

When did we come to be here? There are two possible answers to this question: The short chronology theory: the first movement beyond Alaska into the New World occurring no earlier than 15,000 – 17,000 years ago, followed by successive waves of immigrants The long chronology theory: the first group of people entered the hemisphere at a much earlier date, possibly 21,000–40,000 years ago, with a much later mass secondary wave of immigrants Beyond the question of when we also have the question of how.

Beringina The Long Walk

First proposed in 1590 and has been widely accepted since 1930. Sometime during the last ice age, roughly 17 000 years ago the sea levels dropped. There are scientists who argue that this could have occurred earlier (40 000 years ago) in a previous ice age. Humans then crossed over the exposed land following herds of game animals.

Humans then crossed over the exposed land following herds of game animals. They then followed the ice free corridor that ran roughly where the Rocky Mountains are to warmer southern areas. Eventually these hunters worked their way all the way to the tip of South Africa.

Having populated South America the people began to move back north as the glaciers retreated at the end of the last age Primary support for this theory can be seen by tracing mitochondrial DNA The primary issue with this theory is that we have evidence of people in the South earlier than some scientist believe can be explained by this theory

Watercraft theories The Long Boat Ride

Coastal areas were popular because of: There are a number of different watercraft theories this is due to the fact that early man tended to settle near coastlines. Coastal areas were popular because of: Ease of transportation Abundance of life supporting materials

Pacific Coastal Theory Very similar to the land bridge theory except in this case transportation was by boat. One particular advantage of this theory is that it helps to explain the arrival of people further south than where they could have walked to in the time allowed One anthropologist points out that there were boats in Japan 20 000 years ago and that the Kurile Islands (north of Japan) are like stepping stones to Beringia from which they could have then followed the land bridge and continued all the way south

Atlantic Coastal Theory The most common is the Solutrean theory in which people migrated from Europe instead of Asia The Solutrean people could have used skills similar to the traditional Inuit and followed the glaciers to Greenland and then down to the mainland Issues with this theory include the mtDNA for North America is tied to Asia, also the tools used to make the connection are not seen as being very closely related

Australia / Oceania Theory This is the least accepted of the watercraft theories. In this case people used boats to first migrate from Asia to Australia and other islands in the area. Then from these locations and again likely following glaciers or using islands that existed due to lower water levels worked their way to the southern tip of South America and then migrated north. There is no DNA evidence to support this theory and it would have been the longest trek of all the migration theories

Oral traditions We have always been here

This theory is based on the large number of First Nations oral traditions stating that they have always been here. Further support comes from the debate over whether human life began in one general area or several. What we do know for sure was that there was a great deal of migration in both directions.

Other theories Thinking outside of the box

Lesser theories and particularly less supported theories include: Egyptian – Some evidence indicating that there could be ties to Egypt or Africa but even its proponents don’t claim that these people were anything other than immigrants Atlantis – New age believers make claims that North America is home to the survivors of Atlantis