The Paleolithic and Neolithic Eras

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Early Civilizations.
Advertisements

Template by Bill Arcuri, WCSD Click Once to Begin JEOPARDY! AP World History Chapters 1-2.
Objectives Examine the indicators of civilization, including writing, labor specialization, cities, technology, trade, and political and cultural institutions.
PRE-HISTORY PALEOLITHIC AND NEOLITHIC SOCIETIES TO THE RISE OF CITIES.
Early Man Paleolithic, Mesolithic, Neolithic. Earliest Humans 2.5 Million Years ago, earliest humans in Ethiopia –240,000 Years ago, Homo Sapiens Sapiens.
Review PP #1 SOL objectives Standard 2 Standard 3
Before History Chapter 1.
Ancient Societies. Agricultural Revolution Changed the way people lived – People stayed in one place – Extra food resources allowed people to do other.
Chapter 1.
1 The Peopling of the World, Prehistory–2500 B.C. Time Line
WARM-UP ACTIVITY WORK ON YOUR UNIT 1 VOCABULARY PAGE Ex: Word and definitionUse it in a sentenceDraw a picture.
Copyright 2007, Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Longman
GUNS, GERMS, AND STEEL VIDEO CLIP COMPLETE THE FOLLOWING: 1. Where do inequalities in the world come from according to Diamond? 2. Create a Chart listing.
Big Geography and the Peopling of the Earth
Period One-5% of Questions
Chapter 1 – From Human Prehistory to Early Civilizations
Early Man A. Neolithic Revolution B. River Valley Civilizations.
Writing into the day In the absence of written historical sources, we often turn to science in the form of genetics and archeology. How reliable do you.
By: Estefany Ramos Period 1
The First Civilizations John Ermer World History Miami Beach Senior High School.
Period 1 Early Human History.
Technological and Environmental Transformations to 600 BCE
Turn in the following items from your homework: Answers from video reading Keep your chapter 1 notes or reading guide. I will walk around and check them.
Human Prehistory To Early Civilizations
Prehistory c. – means approximately. Exact date is unknown. B.C.E. – Before Common Era C.E. – Common Era Archeologist have limited evidence of humans who.
PRE-HISTORY PALEOLITHIC AND NEOLITHIC SOCIETIES TO THE RISE OF CITIES Adapted from:
PRE-HISTORY PALEOLITHIC AND NEOLITHIC SOCIETIES TO THE RISE OF CITIES.
The Beginnings of Civilization, 10, B.C.E. The West CHAPTER 1.
From Hunting-Gathering to Civilization
Copyright 2007, Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Longman
Prehistory (p. 5) Nomads (p. 10) Hunter-gatherers (p. 10) Neolithic Revolution (p. 13) Domestication (p. 13) Civilization (p. 19)
The Rise of Civilizations 5,000, BCE From “Hunter-Gatherers” to an Agrarian Society.
PRE-HISTORY PALEOLITHIC AND NEOLITHIC SOCIETIES TO THE RISE OF CITIES.
Civilization Civilizations are characterized by formal states, writing, cities, monuments, job specialization and religion. Trading patterns and political.
The Beginning of Civilization
Early Civilizations. East Africa – Anthropologists started discovering tools Dated from million years ago – More searching in Africa Led to discovery.
Technological and Environmental Transformations to 600 BCE.
Chapter AP* Sixth Edition World Civilizations The Global Experience World Civilizations The Global Experience Copyright ©2011, ©2007, ©2004 by Pearson.
Pre-history Pre-history is a time before written records How can we study pre-history if there are no written records?  Archaeological evidence.
Early Human History Paleolithic art from Lascaux, France.
The First Civilizations John Ermer AP World History Miami Beach Senior High School.
Advanced Placement World History. The World History Environment and Periodization  Key Terms:  Civilization  Climate  Cultural diffusion  Monsoon.
Chapter 1:The Early Civilizations
Part Introduction This part will cover the world’s earliest civilizations. These include the Egyptians in North Africa, the Sumerians and Hebrews in the.
© Cambridge University Press 2013 Overview: the ancient world Chapter 1.
AP World History Review. Images, text, and pure awesomeness taken from Freemanpedia.com.
Early Civilisations. Homo sapiens sapiens by 10,000 B.C.E. –Larger brain, tools, weapons Paleolithic –Hunter Gatherers  Family groups  nomadic –Gender.
Chapter 1 The Ancient Near East: The First Civilizations.
Ancient River Valley Civilizations
 Prehistoric Times, 3 to 4 million years ago existed Australopithicus  100,000–35,000 years ago existed Neanderthal  35,000-8,000 years ago existed.
DO NOW! Turn in the following items from your homework:
Technological and Environmental transformations ORIGINS to c. 600 B. c
AP World History Unit B.C.E..
Chapter 1 The Origins of Western Civilization in the
The Paleolithic era: Old Stone Age or Early stone age
The First Civilizations
From Human History to the Early Civilizations
Early Human History Paleolithic art from Lascaux, France.
Before History Chapter 1.
Chapter 1 – From Human Prehistory to Early Civilizations
Copyright 2007, Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Longman
Chapter 1 – From Human Prehistory to Early Civilizations
Copyright 2007, Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Longman
Chapter 1 – From Human Prehistory to Early Civilizations
Chapter 1 – From Human Prehistory to Early Civilizations
Early Humans and the River Valley Civilizations
Civilizations.
Copyright 2007, Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Longman
Chapter One From Human Prehistory to the Early Civilizations
Human Life in the Era of Hunters and Gatherers
Presentation transcript:

The Paleolithic and Neolithic Eras AP World History Chapter One Ms. Tully

The Emergence of Humankind Hominids – 2-2.5 mil years – Eastern & Southern Africa  Bipedalism Larger brains – Tools – Meat Homo Erectus Homo Sapiens – 250,000 years ago  Modern Humans Uniqueness of humans  pros and cons?

The Paleolithic Era (2.5 Million BCE – 10,000 BCE) Hunting & foraging societies Development of belief systems & culture Development of technology Peopling of the Earth  

The Spread of Human Populations Where did the human species originate from? In what part of the world are the most “sites” of humans?

The Beginning of Agriculture and the Neolithic Revolution End of the Ice Age Domestication of plants and animals New way of interacting with the environment New mutual dependence Slow “revolution”

Consequences of the Neolithic Revolution Permanent settlements & population growth Greater wealth  specializations New technologies  Iron & Bronze Ages Environmental transformations Beginning of inequality Globalization of Agriculture  diffusion & colonization

The Spread of Agriculture Where are the core areas of agriculture? Where did specialty agriculture originate from?

Catal Huyuk Neolithic settlement in Anatolia Irrigation & defense  villages Larger village w/ connected homes

Defining Civilization Civilization  Based on Latin term for city Economic surpluses Division of labor Social hierarchy  social inequalities

Defining Civilization Formal political organization Continued technological development Writing, intellectual thought, artistic expression

Does the history of civilizations include everyone? Is “civilization” a synonym for “good”? Have civilizations been beneficial to humans and/or the environment?

Mesopotamia – The Birth of Civilization “Land Between the Rivers”  Fertile Crescent By 4000 BCE  wheel, bronze & copper metallurgy By 3500 BCE  Sumerians developed cuneiform (writing)

Mesopotamia – The Birth of Civilization Ziggurats  massive towers  Ishtar Organized by city-states  Babylon, Ur, Uruk Sumerians  Akkadians  Babylonians

Egyptian Civilization – The Gift of the Nile Developed along Nile River ca. 3000 BCE Unified state under at pharaoh Dynasty rule  Old Kingdom, Middle Kingdom, New Kingdom

Egyptian Civilization – The Gift of the Nile 3 distinct social classes Polytheistic belief system with emphasis on afterlife Writing system  Hieroglyphics & cursive script Success in mathematics & science

Indus River Valley Civilization Two large cities by 2500 BCE  Harappa and Mohenjo Daro Evidence of strong ruling class Major trading centers Conservative and resistant to innovations Demise of Harappa  environmental changes, administrative decline, nomadic migrations

Early Civilization in China Civilization developed along Yellow River by 3000 BCE  Xia Dynasty 1500 BCE  Shang established kingdom Divine monarch w/ feudal system Emphasis on shamans/oracles  led to writing

New Societies in the Middle East River Valley Civs in decline by 1200 BCE Phoenicians  Levant, 1300 BCE Jews  Levant, 1200 BCE