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Interactive Notebook Set Up

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Presentation on theme: "Interactive Notebook Set Up"— Presentation transcript:

1 Interactive Notebook Set Up
Date: 8/6/2018 Paleolithic & Neolithic Age This will be on 1 page

2 Paleolithic Age Neolithic/Agricultural Revolution:

3 Paleolithic Age The Paleolithic Age is the early period of human history that spans from 2,500,000 B.C.E to 10,000 B.C.E The name comes from the Greek word for “old stone” This due to the prominent use of stone tools

4 Paleolithic Age During this time period humans got their food through a process called hunting and foraging They would gather things such as nuts, berries, grains, greens, ect They would hunt and or fish depending on where they lived

5 Paleolithic Hunters

6 Paleolithic Gathers

7 Paleolithic Age Developed new tools and technology to better hunter/forage and adapt to their region/climate Stone/bone tools, storage/baskets, art/decoration, ect

8 Paleolithic Age Most important technology of the Paleolithic Age was FIRE Fire provided a huge number of benefits for people: Easier digestion of food Protection from predators Warmth to adapt to colder climates Story telling Making clothing and art

9 Paleolithic Age Finding food through hunting and foraging is not extremely reliable Because hunting and forage was so unreliable nomadic humans groups were always relatively small They would be around individuals

10 Paleolithic Age These early humans were nomads
These humans moved based on vegetation/seasonal climates & animal migration Cause of SLOW migration from Africa to Eurasia, Australia, and America Called PEOPLING OF THE EARTH

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12 Paleolithic Age Peoples, ideas, and technology were exchanged as groups interacted with one another

13 Paleolithic Age Hunting and foraging shows us the first example of women and men being responsible for distinctly different tasks Men were more often responsible for the hunting of larger animals This means that they would travel far from the camps in order to hunt

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15 Paleolithic Age Women were more likely to stay close to camps
Mostly due to the fact that women gave birth and raised children Women also foraged for food, trapped small animals, and protected the camp

16 Paleolithic Age Even though women and men were responsible for different tasks there is no evidence that either men or women were superior to one another This is because the contributions of women were viewed as equally important to those of men

17 Paleolithic Art The first evidence of art comes from the Paleolithic Age The earliest evidence comes in the form of “Venus” figurines The earliest of which dates back around 40,000 years

18 Paleolithic Art One of the most prominent examples of Paleolithic are comes in the form of cave paintings The image to right dates around 32,000 B.C.E

19 Paleolithic Art

20 Paleolithic Art

21 Paleolithic Art The art of this time is important for a few reasons:
It demonstrates abstract thought It demonstrates the existence of free time and likely craft specialization It is an EXCELLENT information source

22 The Neolithic Revolution
Beginning around 12,000 years ago(10,000 B.C.E) humans began to produce food of their own This is referred to as either the Agricultural Revolution or the Neolithic Revolution There is no universally accepted theory of how or why humans began farming

23 The Neolithic Revolution
Agricultural production may have developed in response to climate change leading to a die off of large game and need to live where there is reliable food supply This forces humans to need to create a new way to feed themselves

24 The Neolithic Age With the birth of agriculture came the beginning of the Neolithic Age It is hard to attribute specific dates to the Neolithic Age, because farming developed at different times in different parts of the world The Neolithic Age begins around 10,000 B.C.E in most parts of the world

25 The Neolithic Revolution
Agriculture emerged first in the lands of the eastern Mediterranean Called the Fertile Crescent The Levant was the first region to develop agriculture Evidence suggests that the first plant to be domesticated was the fig, as far back as 9,400 BCE

26 The Levant

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28 The Neolithic Revolution
Agriculture emerged independently throughout the world Each region domesticated locally available plants and animals In Mesopotamia, the Nile River Valley, Sub-Saharan Africa, the Indus River Valley, the Yellow River (or Huang He) Valley, Papua New Guinea, Mesoamerica, and the Andes

29 The Neolithic Revolution
Though the fig was the first plant domesticated the domestication of grain, rice, maize, potatoes, were the most important As plants were domesticated so too were animals Humans began to breed animals and use animals for many different purposes Dogs were the first animal to be domesticated After dogs came the pig, the cow, the sheep, and goat

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31 Domestication of Animals

32 The Neolithic Revolution
Pastoralism developed around the same time as agriculture in Afro-Eurasia Pastoral groups increased the development and exchange of technology, animals, and seeds/crops

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34 Domesticated Animals Uses for animals included: Hunting Meat Pelts
Working Milk and Cheese

35 The Neolithic Revolution
Reliable food source=food surplus Food surplus=HUGE growth in population Get used to this concept we are going to see it ALL THE TIME FOOD SURPLUS=POPULATION GROWTH every darn time!!!

36 Population Growth

37 The Neolithic Revolution
Agricultural communities had to work cooperatively and altered the environment to increase food production Ways humans altered their environment: Clear cut areas Dig out rocks and other materials Create irrigation systems

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