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Chapter 2 Section 1

Chapter 2 Section 1. Reaching the Americas. First Americans left no written records to tell us where they came from or when they arrived Earth has gone through several ice ages Last ice age occurred between 100,000 and 10,000 years ago Glaciers

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Chapter 2 Section 1

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  1. Chapter 2 Section 1

  2. Reaching the Americas • First Americans left no written records to tell us where they came from or when they arrived • Earth has gone through several ice ages • Last ice age occurred between 100,000 and 10,000 years ago • Glaciers • Thick sheets of ice – covered one third of the Earth • Stretched across Canada and reached as far south as present-day Kentucky

  3. Crossing the Land Bridge • Glaciers • Locked up water causing sea levels to fall and uncovering land • Far north • A land bridge joined Siberia in northeastern Asia to Alaska in North Americans • Early Americans • Early hunters reached the Americas and they had to keep moving in search of food • Native Americans settled on mountain plateaus, dry deserts, fertile plains, lush woodlands, and thick rain forests • Many different customs and languages

  4. Adapting to New Conditions • Ice Age • About 12,000 years ago the last ice age ended • Temps rose • Glaciers melted • Land bridge between Siberia and Alaska disappeared under the Bering Strait • Large animals began to die out • Smaller animals, wild berries, nuts, grains, and fis become a larger part of their diet

  5. Adapting to New Conditions - Continued • About 5,000 years ago people in Central America learned to grow crops such as corn, beans, and squash • Farming brought changes • People stayed in one place and set up permanent villages

  6. Olmec Civilization • Farming key advance • Central America • Grew surplus food to support large populations and the first cities emerged • Cities mark the rise of the first civilization • Civilization • A society that has certain basic features • Cities • Well-organized governments • Different social classes • Complex religion • Method of record keeping

  7. Olmec Civilization - Continued • Earliest known civilization in the Americas • Olmecs in Central America • Olmecs • Lived in lowlands along the gulf of Mexico • Stone heads carved by the Olmecs were found by scientist • Farmers supplied nearby cities with food • Powerful leaders built stone temples left few written records • Studied the stars and developed a calendar so they could predict the change of seasons and mark the passage of time

  8. The Mayas • Mayans • Early Mayans lived in the rain forests that are currently Guatemala and Mexico • Cleared rain forest and draining swamps to create farmland • produced great harvests of corn, enough to feed large cities • Population grew – cities began • Trade flowed along a network of roads that linked inland cities and the coast

  9. Mayans – Social Classes • Social Classes • 1st – Priests • Held greatest power • Performed ceremonies needed to bring good harvests or victory in battle • Ceremonies conducted in temples built on top of huge stone pyramids • 2nd – Nobles • Served as warriors or government officials • 3rd – laborers / farmers • Grew corn, squash, and other crops • Slaves • Prisoners of war or criminals

  10. Mayans – Advances in Learning • Priests • Mayan priests had to know exactly when to honor the many gods who were thought to control the natural world • Priests studied the sun, moon, and stars • Made impressive advances in astronomy and mathematics • Learned to predict eclipses and created an accurate, 365 –day calendar • Developed a system of numbers that included the concept of zero

  11. Mayans – Advances in Learning - Continued • Around A.D. 900 • Mayans abandoned their cities • Thought for abandoning their cities • Warfare, drought – or both • Rain forest • Swallowed up the great Mayan temples and palaces

  12. The Aztecs • Aztec Civilization • Rose far to the north • Aztecs • Nomads • People move from place to place in search of food • 1300’s • Settled around Lake Texcoco in central Mexico • Powerful empire built

  13. The Aztecs - Tenochtitlan • Tenochtitlan • Island in the middle of the lake • Capital • System of causeways • Raised roads made of packed earth • Linked the capital to the mainland • Farming • Farmed the shallow swamps of Lake Texcoco • Dug canals • Used the mud to fill in parts of the lake • Placed reed mats to the lake bottom to create farmland • Chinampas – floating gardens

  14. The Aztecs - Religion • Priests • Studied the heavens and developed complex calendars • Calendars • Told people when to plant / harvest • Rituals • Designed to please the many Aztec gods • Sun God • Important to the Aztecs • Compared the sun’s battle to their own, calling themselves “warriors of the sun” • Believed the sun required human sacrifices in order to rise each day • Sacrifices • Thousands of captives each year were sacrificed to please this powerful god

  15. The Aztecs – A Powerful Empire • 1500’s • Aztecs ruled a huge empire • Empire • Stretched from the Gulf of Mexico to the Pacific Ocean • Far from peaceful community • Heavy taxes and the sacrifice of huge numbers of prisoners of war sparked many revolts • Other people conquered by the Aztecs were eager for revenge

  16. The Aztecs – Social Classes • 1st Emperor • 2nd Priests and Nobles • 3rd Warriors • 4th Merchants and Artisans • 5th Farmers • 6th Slaves

  17. The Incas • Incas • South of the Aztecs – Incas built one of the largest empires in the Americas • 1500 • Empire stretched for almost 2500 miles along the west coast of South America • Center of the empire • Capital at Cuzco located high in the Andes • Cuzco • Holy city to the Incas • All nobles tried to visit the capital at least once in their lifetime • Massive palaces and temples made of stone and decorated with gold ornaments were located here • Center • Palace of the emperor – who was known as Sapa Inca • Emperor – regarded as god – descended from the sun god

  18. The Incas - Continued • Cuzco • Emperor • Ruled more than 10 million people • People • Lived in coastal deserts to the lowland jungles to the highlands of the Andes • Incan Empire • Well organized • Well informed of the affairs in all parts of his empire • Sent officials to act as governors of his domain • Governors • Made sure every person worked some of the time on the states projects

  19. The Incas - Continued • Incas • Roads • Maintained a system of roads that covered more than 10,000 miles • Builders carved roads in rock cliffs and stretched rope bridges across deep gorges • Runners • Royal orders were sent with runners across these roads • Carried a device called quipu – a cord or string with knots that stood for quantities • Quantities could be bags of grain, number of soldiers or other amounts • Skilled engineers • Built massive stone temples and forts • Used the engineering skills to farm the dry rugged mountain lands • Terraces • Wide steps of land out of the steep mountainsides

  20. People of the Southwest • About 3000 years ago • Farming spread northward • Farming societies emerged to what is now called the American Southwest • Hohokams and Anasazis • Hohokams • Lived in present-day southern Arizona • Dug networks of irrigation ditches to they could farm the desert land • Ditches carried water from the Salt and Gila rivers to fields • Produced corn, squash, and beans

  21. People of the Southwest - Continued • Anasazis • Lived in the Four Corners region • Colorado, Utah, New Mexico, and Arizona • Irrigated the desert to farm • Created a network of roads to link dozens of towns • Traders traveled roads, carrying cotton, sandals, and blankets woven from turkey feathers

  22. Anasazi Houses • Built large houses with walls of stone and adobe or sundried brick • Houses called pueblos – Spanish word for village • New homes • Built along steep cliffs • Toeholds cut into the rock let people climb the cliff walls • Farmers planted their crops on land above the cliffs

  23. Mound Builders • Built large earth mounds beginning about 3000 years ago • Thousands of these mounds dot the landscape from the Appalachian Mountains to the Mississippi Valley and from Wisconsin to Florida • First mounds used for burials • Then mounds were used for religious ceremonies • Best known groups of Mound Builders were the Hopewells and the Mississippians • Mississippians built a large city at Cahokia in present day Illinois

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