First Farmers The Revolutions of Agriculture 10,000 B.C.E. –3000 B.C.E.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
First Farmers: The Revolutions of Agriculture
Advertisements

1.1.I Review How were women treated in most Stone Age societies?
Paleolithic Era Through Bronze Age. Early Migrations of People Historians think that people started in Africa about 90,000 years ago Moved to Asia, then.
UNIT FIVE AGRICULTURE: PRIMARY ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES
What was the Neolithic Revolution?
6th Grade UBD - Unit 2 - Neolithic Revolution
Chapter 1 Part 2 The Neolithic Revolution M-W PHS.
Chapter 3 From Hunters and Gatherers to Farmers
The Flintstones And Beyond.
Big Geography and the Peopling of the Earth
Period One-5% of Questions
The Neolithic Revolution (8000BCE-3500BCE) Sometimes termed the Agricultural Revolution. Humans begin to slowly domesticate plant and animal stocks in.
Technological and Environmental Transformations to 600 BCE
EARLY MAN to First Civilizations
Ways of the World: A Brief Global History with Sources Second Edition
Chapter 3 Part #2 The Agricultural Revolution
Change Over Time Thesis: Identifies both Changes and Continuities During the Neolithic era (10.000B.C.E -4000B.C.E) early man developed settlements based.
Development of Civilization
How did the Neolithic Revolution transform human societies? E. Napp.
Coming to Be, Coming to Farm Big Geography, the Peopling of the Earth, Neolithic Revolution and Early Agriculture Mr. Prindiville.
types of villages A number of factors allow a change in societies: differences in natural environment, encounters with strangers, even deliberate choices.
The Neolithic Revolution and Early Agriculture Agricultural Domestication Independent Innovation Cultural Diffusion Civilization Social Stratification.
Gender Differences among Hunter- Gatherers Sexual division of labor, but complementary roles Mother-goddess figures.
Humans Try to Control Nature. Advances in Technology  For tens of thousands of years, those of the Old Stone Age were Nomads.  Highly mobile people.
5 Themes of AP World History
Neolithic Revolution The Birth of Farming.
What is a land bridge? What is an ice age? What is migration?
The First Farmers Neolithic Era.
Beginnings of Agriculture
Turning Points in History
Global History I: Spiconardi
Unit 1: Foundations 8,000 B.C.E.-600 B.C.E.. Tabs 1.1 Big Geography & Peopling the Earth 1.2 Neolithic Rev. & Early Agricultural Societies 1.3 Development.
The Old Stone Age Homo Erectus. 500, ,000 years ago. Stood upright and learned simple tool use. Developed and spread in Africa and to Asia and Europe.
Emergence of Civilization Unit 1 New Stone Ages. End of Paleolithic Era Marked by the end of the last Ice Age Glaciers start to melt and move back towards.
Neolithic Revolution Otherwise known as the First Agricultural Revolution.
Ways of the World: A Brief Global History First Edition
Ways of the World: A Brief Global History with Sources Second Edition
 Also known as the Old Stone Age  Hunter-Gatherer Society  As culture begins to develop, they are able to overcome the many limits set by their physical.
The Dawn of History Section 2. Paleolithic Age “The Old Stone Age” The earliest period of human history 2 million B.C. – about 10,000 BC.
II. New Stone Age. A. Neolithic Age 10, years ago New Stone Age Marks the end of the last Ice Age Average world temperature increases Polish stones.
HUNTERS AND GATHERERS. The Earliest People  Probably lived in Africa.  The men hunted and the women gathered to have enough food to survive.
First Farmers: The Revolutions of Agriculture 10,000 B.C.E B.C.E. A.P. World History, Chapter 2.
Agricultural Revolution or Neolithic Rev. – Second great human endeavor after the settlement of the globe Started about 12,000 years ago Deliberate cultivation.
Agricultural Revolution or Neolithic Rev. – Second great human endeavor after the settlement of the globe Started about 12,000 years ago in Mesopotamia.
Ways of the World: A Brief Global History First Edition CHAPTER 2 First Farmers: The Revolutions of Agriculture 10,000 B.C.E. –3000 B.C.E. Copyright ©
Warm-up Why do you think humans stopped being nomads and formed civilizations?
Ways of the World: A Brief Global History with Sources Second Edition Chapter 1 First Peoples, First Farmers: Most of History in a Single Chapter, to 4000.
Human Migration and the Neolithic Revolution
The Emergence of Human Communities. Paleolithic (“Old Stone”) Age.
Neolithic / Agricultural Revolution Started about 12,000 years ago Deliberate cultivation of plants Domestication of animals - deliberate breeding of.
CH. 1 The First Peoples. Hunters and Gatherers And so it begins….. 95% of the time that humans have been on earth was spent hunting and gathering.
Global History I: Spiconardi
The Revolutions of Agriculture, 10,000 B.C.E.-3,000 B.C.E.
What was the Neolithic Revolution?
Bell Ringer Name THREE facts from yesterday’s discussion about the Paleolithic Era that you didn’t know before.
Chapter 3 Part #2 The Agricultural Revolution
The Agricultural Revolution
UNIT FIVE AGRICULTURE: PRIMARY ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES
Chapter 1 First Peoples, First Farmers: Most of Human History in a Single Chapter.
WHAPPING 1.2 The Neolithic Revolution and Early Agricultural Societies
Technological and Environmental Transformations, to 600 B.C.E.
THE AGRICULTURAL REVOLUTION
How did the Neolithic Revolution transform human societies?
UNIT FIVE AGRICULTURE: PRIMARY ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES
First Peoples; First Farmers
Today’s lesson is brought to you by FIRE, a useful discovery!
Global History I: Adamiak
Global History I: Adamiak
Global One Unit 1 Regents Review
The Agricultural Revolution
Presentation transcript:

First Farmers The Revolutions of Agriculture 10,000 B.C.E. –3000 B.C.E.

Key Concept and Focus Questions Key Concept 1.2 The Neolithic Revolution and Early Agricultural Societies What were the long-term demographic, social, political, and economic effects of the Neolithic Revolution? How did pastoral societies resemble or differ from early agricultural societies? How did the Neolithic Revolution affect human societies economically & socially? Where did the Neolithic Revolution first transform human populations? What were the environmental effects of the Neolithic Revolution? What effects did pastoralism & agriculture have on the food supply? What were the social effects of the increased food supply caused by increase of agriculture? What technological innovations are associated with the growth of agriculture?

Breakthrough to Agriculture Common Patterns Separate, independent, and almost simultaneous Between 12,000–4,000 years ago, agriculture developed in Fertile Crescent of Southwest Asia, several places in sub-Saharan Africa, China, New Guinea, Mesoamerica, the Andes, and eastern North America Climate change (end of the Ice Age) made it possible for plants to flourish Gender patterns: women likely led the way towards developing agriculture As hunters, men likely led the way towards animal domestication The warmer climate at the end of the Ice Age may have allowed a dramatic population growth of gatherer-hunter communities, thus necessitating a more abundant and stable food supply

The Globalization of Agriculture Triumph and Resistance Agriculture spread by diffusion, which involved exposure and adoption (The spread from China into Southeast Asia is an example of this process) Agriculture also spread by migration, which involved agricultural ways of life being forced on conquered people or the displacement of existing communities (The sub-Saharan African Bantu migrations illustrate this phenomenon) Some resisted agriculture for environmental reasons Settled agricultural communities were often incompatible with gathering and hunting groups, leading to violent displacement Some pre-agricultural societies were changed by exposure to technology and epidemic diseases and others inter-married with members of the new settled societies

The Culture of Agriculture Dramatic population increase Increased human impact on the environment More humans meant a greater impact on the planet, specifically human selection of favorable plants and animals Agricultural life led to shorter life expectancy; people had a shorter physical stature and were plagued by tooth decay, anemia, and malnutrition More vulnerable to famine brought on by crop failure or drought Technological development such as pottery, jewelry, weaponry, and tool making Animals were used for secondary purposes, such as hides, wool, milking, and transport Wine and beer became common between 5400 and 4000 B.C.E., as did rowdy behavior

Social Variation in the Age of Agriculture Pastoral Societies Arctic tundra, deserts, and grasslands were generally not favorable to settled agriculture, but they were good for animal husbandry Milk, meat, and blood became central to the diet of these communities Communities moved about with their animals looking for seasonally appropriate and unexploited grazing lands Conflict with settled communities: Age-old conflict existed between the wealthier, settled communities and the nomadic herders Agriculture Village Societies Ties to social patterns of gathering and hunting communities continued in communities that did without formal state systems of kings, chiefs, and bureaucrats Importance of female work in farming and textile work gave women social importance Without a formal state system, extended family ties linked people together with elders exercising authority

Chiefdom Power came not from physical force or violence but by giving gifts, performing religious and political rituals, and personal charisma Chiefs combined the sacred and the political Chiefs collected food and manufactured items from the commoners and redistributed them to warriors