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Explore how human populations, migrations, settlement patterns, and technology evolved from 8000 B.C.E. to 1450 C.E., impacting agriculture, demography, and the environment in various societies. Witness the transition from Paleolithic hunter-gatherer lifestyles to Neolithic agricultural advancements, leading to societal changes, plague outbreaks, and the spread of new technologies. Discover how human activities influenced demographic shifts, environmental degradation, and the rise of civilizations, shaping the course of history.
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Human/Environment Interaction • This theme includes: • Demography & Disease • Demography is the statistical study of human populations • Migrations • Patterns of Settlement • Technology
8000 B.C.E. – 600 B.C.E. • Big Geography and peopling of the earth • Neolithic Revolution and Early Agricultural Societies
Paleolithic Era: Demography Population growth during the Paleolithic Era was relatively stagnant
Paleolithic Era: Patterns of Settlement • Hunter-Gatherers (Foragers) • Men hunt and/or fish; women gather fruits • Follow migratory patterns of animals • Need large portions of land to support themselves • Life expectancy was 20 years or less • Lived in groups of 20-30 people
Adapt technology and cultures to new climate regions • Humans use fire in new ways • Aid hunting and foraging • Protect against predators • Adapt to cold environments Developed wider range of tools specially adapted to different environments
Neolithic Era: Technology • Agriculture (10,000 BCE) • Caused by climate change? • Slash & Burn • Domestication of Animals • Technology related to agriculture • Irrigation, canals, etc. • Bronze metallurgy • People need nature & nature needs people
Transition Effects • Created a more reliable but not necessarily more diversified food supply • Massive environmental impact • Intense cultivation of selected plants to the exclusion of others • Pastoralism emerged • Domesticated animals and led herds • Patriarchy and forced labor systems developed • Gave elite men concentrated power
Neolithic Era: Demography • Effects of agriculture • Increase in population • Rise of disease • Decline of life expectancy • Environmental degradation • Increase in pollution • Increase in deforestation • Increase in desertification Intensive agriculture caused human population to jump from 5-8 million to 60 to 70 million in 5,000 years
New Patterns of Settlement • Small village communities • Pastoral societies • Nomadic herders • Rise of civilizations • Mesopotamia (3500 BCE) • Egypt (3000 BCE) • Indus River (2500 BCE) • China (2000 BCE) • Olmec (1400 BCE) • Chavin (900 BCE)
Human Migration: Polynesians Bananas!
New Technology: Iron • Iron use begins 1500 BCE • Effects of Iron • Population growth • Expansion of agriculture • Growth of cities • Expansion of civilization
Classical Period 600 B.C.E. – 600 C.E. • Cities grow and serve as centers for trade • Empires expand and use Imperialism and relocation to create more farm land • Imperial societies employ methods to maintain food production • Corvee • Slavery • Rents and tributes • Peasant communities • Family and household production
Environmental Damage • Through excessive mobilization of resources Imperial governments caused environmental damage • Deforestation • Desertification • Soil Erosiaon • Silted Rivers
Emergence of Trans-regional Networks • Volume of long distance trade increases dramatically • Resulted from the demand for raw materials and luxury goods • Land and water routes • Exchange of people, technology, religious and cultural beliefs, food crops, domesticated animals, and disease pathogens developed alongside trade goods
Trade Routes • Eurasian Silk Roads • Trans-Saharan caravan routes • Indian Ocean sea lanes • Mediterranean sea lanes
Technology • Yokes • Saddles • Stirrups • Qanant System • Lateen sail • Dhow ships
Disease • Spread of disease pathogens diminished urban populations and contributed to the decline of some empires • Roman Empire • Han Empire
Classical Demography • Spread of epidemic disease • Smallpox, Justinian plague, etc. • Population decreases dramatically • Europe falls 50% between 200-600 CE • Asia’s population falls from 170 to 135 million between 0-600 CE • Contributes to the decline of classical empires
Post Classical 600 C.E. – 1450 C.E. • Afro-Eurasia and the Americas remained separate • Deepening and widening of old a new networks of human interaction within and across regions • Silk Roads • Mediterranean Sea • Trans-Saharan • Indian Ocean • Conduit for biological diffusion
Technology • Horse collar • Caravanserai • Camel Saddles • Champa rice • Waru Waru agricultural techniques in the Andean areas • Improved terracing techniques
Post-Classical Migration Camels!
Post-Classical Demography • Population grows after 800 CE • Technology • Europe: moldboard plow and three-field system • China: Champa rice & terrace farming • Africa: Iron plow • Aztecs: Chinampas • Spread of crops • Rice, cotton, sugarcane, citrus fruits, etc. End of a mini-Ice Age?
Continued Diffusion of Crops and Pathogens • New foods and agricultural techniques were adopted in populated areas • Bananas in Africa • New Rice in East Asia • Spread of cotton, sugar, and citrus throughout Dar al-Islam and the Mediterranean basin • Spread of epidemic diseases • Black death
Increased Economic Productive Capacity and Its Consequences • Changes in trade networks resulted from and stimulated increasing productive capacity – important implications for social and gender structures and environmental processes • Productivity rose in both agriculture and industry • Supported population growth and urbanization
Multiple factors led to the decline of urban areas • Disease • Decline of agricultural productivity • Little Ice Age • Invasions
Multiple factors contributed to urban revival • End of invasions • Availability of safe and reliable transport • Rise of commerce and warmer temperatures between 800-1300 • Greater availability of labor
Post-Classical Demography • Urbanization • Hangzhou—1 million ppl. • Paris—275,000 people • Italian cities • Tenochtitlan • Bubonic Plague • China’s population fell 50% from 1200-1400 • Europe’s population fell 33%-50% • Population took only 100 years to rebound
Global Interactions 1450 - 1750 • Interconnection of Eastern and Western hemispheres • Transoceanic voyaging • Global circulation of some commodities • Formation of new regional markets • Facilitated the migration of large numbers of people • Germs carried to the Americas and ravaged indigenous people • Global exchange of crops and animals altered agriculture, diets, and populations around the planet
Technology • Astrolabe • Revised maps • Caravels • Navigational School
Demography 1450-1750: Americas • Discovery of the Americas • Decreased indigenous American population by as much as 90% • Replaced by two waves of migration • African slave trade • European colonization
European Colonization • Spread of diseases • Small pox, measles, influenza • Unintentional transfer of vermin • Mosquitoes and rats
Goods Exchanged • American foods became staple crops in various parts of Europe • Potatoes • Maize • Manioc • Cash crops were grown primarily on plantations with coerced labor and were exported mainly to Europe and the Middle East • Sugar • Tobacco
Goods Exchanged • Afro-Eurasian fruit trees, grains, sugar, and domesticated animals were brought by Europeans to the Americas, while other foods were brought by African Slaves • Horses • Pigs • Cattle • Okra • Rice
Effects • Populations in Afro-Eurasia benefited nutritionally from the increased diversity of American food crops • European colonization and the introduction of European agriculture and settlements practices in the Americas often affected the physical environment • Deforestation • Soil Depletion • Eradication of native species
Demography 1450-1750: China • China’s population tripled from 1650-1750 • Improved farming techniques • Introduction of American crops (potatoes and corn) • End of nomadic invasions
Demography 1450-1750: Europe • Urbanization • Netherlands became 1st country with 50% urban population • London—50,000 in 1600; 400,000 by 1650 • Paris—200,000 in 1350; 500,000 by 1700 • Agricultural Revolution • Crop rotation and enclosures • American crops (corn and potatoes) • Population in every area of Europe increased by 50-100% in the 18th century
New Modes of Production • Changes in agricultural labor • Peasant labor intensified • Growth of plantations • Chattle slavery, encomienda, hacienda, mit’a • Surge in agricultural productivity • New methods in crop and field rotation • Introduction of new crops • Demographic growth • By 1700s population was restored in the americas
Industrialization ad Global Integration 1750 - 1900 • Need for raw materials • Increased food supplies • Growing populations
Industrial Revolution & Resources Cotton Cotton Cotton Palm Oil Rubber Rubber Rubber Gold & Diamonds Gold Meat