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The Beginning of Agriculture

The Beginning of Agriculture. The Neolithic Revolution. The New Stone Age 10000 BC- 4000 BC. Sometimes termed the Agricultural Revolution . Humans begin to slowly domesticate plants and animals. Agriculture requires nomadic peoples to become sedentary .

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The Beginning of Agriculture

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  1. The Beginning of Agriculture

  2. The Neolithic Revolution The New Stone Age 10000 BC- 4000 BC • Sometimes termed the • Agricultural Revolution. • Humans begin to slowly domesticate plants and animals. Agriculture requires nomadic peoples to become sedentary. • Populations begin to rise in areas where plant and animal domestication occurred. • 1st domesticated animal-dog • 1st domesticated plant-fig

  3. The Neolithic Revolution Advantages of Agriculture

  4. The Neolithic Revolution Agriculture Slowly Spreads:

  5. The New Stone Age Agriculture and Specialization • Led to bartering: • Kind of trade • No money • Market Day: • Your mother carries fresh cheeses, and your father has made strong wooden bows. They hope to trade for cloth to make warm capes . You see old friends, and you notice strangers who speak in languages you don’t understand. They bring clay pots or tools or baskets to trade for products from your village.

  6. The New Stone Age Farming Techniques and Adapting Surroundings • People built terraces • (level platforms of Earth • that climb a hill like a • staircase) • Some practiced slash & burn agriculture. • Brought water to the crops through canals and reservoirs • Early people also studied the weather.

  7. The New Stone Age Tools for Farmers • * Adze- a kind of ax • * Hoe- Keeping weeds out of • gardens • * Sickle- cutting fields of grain

  8. The Neolithic Revolution First Towns Develop Catal Huyuk Modern Turkey First settled: c. 7000BCE Jericho Modern Israel First settled: c. 7000BCE

  9. The Neolithic Revolution First Towns Develop • Towns require social differentiation: metal workers, pottery workers, farmers, soldiers, religious and political leaders. • (POSSIBLE B/C FOOD SURPLUSES!) • Served as trade centers for the area; specialized in the production of certain unique crafts • Beginnings of social stratification (class)

  10. The Neolithic Revolution • Towns Present Evidence of: • Religious structures • (burial rites, art) • Political & Religious leaders were the same • Still relied on limited hunting & gathering for food

  11. The Neolithic Revolution • Roles of Women • Women generally lost status under male-dominated, patriarchal systems. • Women were limited in vocation, • worked in food production, etc. • Women may have lacked the • same social rights as men.

  12. The Neolithic Revolution Metal Working: From Copper to Bronze • The working of metals became very important to early human settlements for tools & weapons. • Early settlements gradually shifted from copper to the stronger alloy bronze by 3,000BCE—ushers in the Bronze Age! • Metal working spread throughout human communities slowly as agriculture had.

  13. The Neolithic Revolution Further Technological Advancements

  14. The Neolithic Revolution Early Human Impact on the Environment • Deforestation in places where copper, bronze, and salt were produced. • Erosion and flooding where agriculture disturbed soil and natural vegetation. • Selective extinction of large land animals and weed plants due to hunting & agriculture.

  15. The Neolithic Revolution Advanced Civilization: The Next Step? • By 3500BCE, relatively large, advanced preliterate societies had developed along the Indus, Huang He, Nile, and Tigris & Euphrates Rivers. • As societies grew in size and need, sedentary human beings were once again faced with pressures to adapt to changing natural and human environments.

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