1 / 19

In the beginning…

Early Humans and the Neolithic Revolution. In the beginning…. Modern humans evolved in eastern Africa between 50,000 and 100,000 years ago Modern? Physically modern bodies, like ours Behaviorally modern too, they had: Technology (tools of stone, bone and horn) Art (painting, sculpture)

cortez
Download Presentation

In the beginning…

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Early Humans and the Neolithic Revolution In the beginning…

  2. Modern humans evolved in eastern Africa between 50,000 and 100,000 years ago • Modern? • Physically modern bodies, like ours • Behaviorally modern too, they had: • Technology (tools of stone, bone and horn) • Art (painting, sculpture) • Religion (burial customs) Out of Africa

  3. Early Sculpture Found in Austria, age 25,000 years,size 4” tall

  4. Groups divide, mix, reunite, sharing genes, languages, customs, technology = STRONGER • 60,000ya: spread to SW Asia (MidEast) • 50,000ya: South Asia (India) • 40,000ya: Australia • 15-30,000ya: the Americas • How do we know this? DNA Mapping On the move – early human migration

  5. This map shows both physically modern humans as well as pre-human ancestors like Neanderthals. The last of these died less than 24,000 years ago. Early modern humans probably met them, and even competed for resources with them. Mated? “Out of Africa”

  6. These modern humans were like us in many ways, but 1 very important thing made their lives very different from ours. What do you think it was? • Need a hint? • They had to keep moving around… • Looking for something… • FOOD! And then what happened?

  7. They were nomadic hunter-gatherers, moving around, hunting animals, gathering plants…why? • Then came the big discovery: • “If you put seeds in the ground, they turn into plants! Plants we can eat!!!” • THIS WAS REVOLUTIONARY!!! Hunter-Gatherers

  8. The nomads stopped moving around… why? They started farming, this was a big change THE NEOLITHIC REVOLUTION (aka the Agricultural Revolution) Viva la revolucion!

  9. WHAT: the change to farming • WHEN: beginning about 13,000ya • WHY: to produce food instead of hunt-gather • WHERE: first the Fertile Crescent, then China, India and (later) North and South America • HOW: Domestication of plants and animals Facts of the revolution

  10. The original aggies This map shows places where agriculture was developed. Places with a question mark are unsure if farming developed independently or if it was copied from another area.

  11. This is where the Agricultural Revolution began. The first people to stop nomadic hunting and gathering and grow their own food started farming here, about 13,000 years ago. Fertile Crescent farmers domesticated the grains wheat and barley, together with some kinds of peas and beans. These first farmers and herders domesticated animals, too. They began with dogs and then goats, sheep, pigs and cows. The Fertile crescent

  12. The key to the Revolution was DOMESTICATION, making a wild plant or animal more useful to humans. • How? Controlled breeding. More useful? • Plants: bigger edible parts (fruit, leaves or seeds) • Animals: more products or useful services • Must have wild stock to begin with, some places do, some don’t. Advantage? Effects? Domestic life

  13. Care for a banana?

  14. How about some corn?

  15. Examples of Early Crops around the Ancient World

  16. Dates of Domestication of Large Mammal Species

  17. This was a BIG change, a revolution What effects do you think this had on the lives of these early people, the first farmers? Think about food, homes, population, society, health, work, the environment… And then what happened?

More Related