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SOL

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SOL s in this unit WHI.2 The student will demonstrate knowledge of early development of humankind from the Paleolithic Era to the agricultural revolution by – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: SOL


1
SOLs in this unit
  • WHI.2 The student will demonstrate knowledge of
    early development of humankind from the
    Paleolithic Era to the agricultural revolution by
  • Explaining the impact of geographic environment
    on hunter-gatherer societies
  • Listing characteristics of hunter-gatherer
    societies including their use of tools and fire
  • Describing technological and social advancements
    that gave rise to stable communities
  • Explaining how archaeological discoveries are
    changing present-day knowledge of early peoples.

2
Instructions
  • Anything in red (STOP and pay close attention) is
    critical information and should be copied
    exactly.
  • Anything written in yellow (slow down and pay
    attention) is useful information. You should
    write it in your notes like a text message.
  • Anything in green (go on to the next point) you
    do not have to write.
  • Any time you see a video with no text it is your
    responsibility to write notes for it.

3
What can we learn from Ogg?
  • Paleolithic Era
  • Paleoold
  • Lithicstone
  • Old Stone Age
  • Simple stone tools
  • Axes, knives, clubs
  • Fire
  • Hunter/gatherers
  • Nomads

4
Lessons from Ogg
  • Mesolithic Era
  • Meso middle
  • Middle Stone Age
  • Early metal tools
  • Hunting tools (spears, bow/arrow)
  • Water-faring
  • Semi-nomadic
  • Small-scale farming.

5
Lessons from Ogg
  • Neolithic Era
  • Neo New
  • New Stone Age
  • More metal tools, advanced stone tools
  • Larger settlements
  • Domestication of animals
  • Large-scale agriculture and storage of food
  • Pottery and weaving.

6
Lessons from Ogg
  • Bronze Age
  • Copper and Bronze working
  • Farming tools, metal weapons
  • Large-scale building
  • Division of labor.

7
Notes Quiz 1
  1. What does Paleolithic mean?
  2. What is a nomad?
  3. During which era did small scale farming begin?
  4. When did man start domesticating animals?
  5. What two metals make bronze?

8
Economics
  • Simple barter in all of the eras
  • Barter trade
  • Trade a chicken for some grain
  • Led to the use of pack animals and the caravan.

9
Government
  • Clans and villages
  • Rule by the best hunters and fighters.

10
Geography
  • Located in river valleys and areas where game is
    available.

11
The Fertile Crescent
  • What are the river boundaries of the Fertile
    Crescent?
  • Nile,
  • Euphrates, and
  • Tigris
  • Mesopotamia
  • Meso means?

12
The Fertile Crescent
  • Sumer
  • Region by the Persian Gulf
  • Silt made it fertile
  • Built canals and dams to control floods
  • Using technology to control geography
  • Led to the creation of city-states
  • Geography influences government
  • City of Ur.

13
The Fertile Crescent
  • Priests as leaders
  • Worship forces of nature
  • Polytheism
  • Worship of many gods
  • Try to appease the gods
  • Temples
  • Technology influences religion
  • Hierarchy
  • Where one group is subject to another.

14
  • So
  • How do we find out all of this stuff?
  • We have our ways.

15
  • Archaeology Study of old things
  • We find artifacts
  • Artifacts are items from an older civilization
  • Include tools, pottery, bones, cloth, and fossils
  • But how do we know how old it is?
  • We use radio-carbon dating, the fossil record,
    and geological column.

16
Stonehenge
  • Neolithic artifact that used stones for some
    purpose
  • No one knows for sure what it was used for or who
    built it.

17
  • The Leakeys
  • Archaeologists and anthropologists in Africa
  • Discovered many skeletons near Olduvai Gorge.

18
Lucy
  • Johannsen discovered the skeleton Lucy who is
    supposedly about 3.2 million years old and the
    earliest known proto-human.

19
Intersection
With a partner, ask and answer the following
questions Why are we concerned with our
origins? What makes a civilization a
civilization? Where would be a good place to live
if you were going to start a new
civilization? What supplies do you think youd
need to start a new civilization?
20
Ancient Texts
  • Mr. Williams,
  • You mean they had cell phones back in the day?
  • No. Texts refer to writings
  • So what were some of the writings that they had?

21
The Epic of Gilgamesh
  • Story about death, friendship, the meaning of
    life, and the way the gods treated humans
  • Gilgameshs friend dies
  • Gilgamesh goes to the underworld to rescue him
  • He discovers that since everyone dies, life is
    meaningless
  • The gods are cruel since they punish man.

22
Ancient Texts
  • Writing was done originally in pictographs
  • Hieroglyphs were difficult to produce and very
    time consuming to make

23
Ancient Texts
  • Cuneiform evolved from hieroglyphs and were based
    on sounds called phonics.
  • Writing created the need for professional scribes
    or writers.

24
Ancient Texts
Hieroglyphics
Demotic
Greek
  • Hieroglyphs were not able to be translated until
    the Rosetta Stone was discovered.

25
Indias Civilizations
  • Indus River
  • Located in India
  • The major cities of the Indus River Civilization
    were Harappa in the north and Mohenjo-Daro in the
    south
  • The cities were prone to flooding since they were
    built along the Indus River.

26
Indias Civilizations
  • Ganges River Civilization
  • Also is subject to floods
  • Snows in the Himalayas would melt and cause major
    flooding in the spring while the monsoons
    (seasonal, rain-bearing winds) would cause floods
    in the summer and fall
  • While these floods left silt, they also destroyed
    crops.

27
Indias Civilizations
  • Government
  • Kingships were the norm
  • Nobles were also present. These men were most
    likely wealthy and advised the king on wars and
    conquest.

28
Indias Civilizations
  • India had planned cities built with baked bricks
    and protective walls
  • They also had citadels which are fortresses to
    protect city dwellers
  • Technology and geography merge as they also used
    natural barriers such as deserts, mountains, and
    rivers as lines of defense.

29
Indias Civilizations
  • India had a stratified society (hierarchy)
  • Kings, nobles, peasants
  • There were no known schools
  • The societies were polytheistic
  • The civilizations fell, but we dont know when,
    how, or why.

30
Early Chinas Civilizations
  • Shang Dynasty
  • Settlements were along the Huang He (Yellow)
    River
  • Floods and deposited a very rich, yellow silt
    called loess
  • Created very fertile farmland for the developing
    civilization
  • Because the floods were so destructive and
    violent, cities tended to be fairly small.

31
Early Chinas Civilizations
  • The Shang built dams to help control the floods
  • There was some early writing, but not many people
    could read or write.

32
Early Chinas Civilizations
  • The people of the Shang lived in small, close
    housing. They lived in a communal (sharing),
    clannish (family-based) society
  • Religiously, they were polytheistic and
    naturalistic (worship nature). They also created
    icons (religious objects) of pottery for worship.

33
Early South America
  • Farming
  • River civs develop
  • Not much violent flooding
  • Tropical areas provided for better growing
    climate
  • Small cities along rivers
  • No farming tools
  • What would that do to populations in these
    civilizations?

34
Think about it!
  • What are the main differences between India and
    China
  • Geographically?
  • Politically?
  • Technologically?
  • Societies?
  • Economically?

35
Review
  • 8 main ideas to remember
  • Nomads wandered and lived in the Paleo- and
    Mesolithic Eras.
  • Agricultural Revolution occurred with the
    Neolithic Era.
  • Most civilizations settled near sources of fresh
    water (rivers, lakes, etc.).
  • We learn about these times from artifacts left
    behind by early peoples.

36
Review
  • 8 main ideas to remember
  • We figure out how old items are by radio-carbon
    dating.
  • Societies overcame limits of environment by
    domesticating animals and plants.
  • Archaeologists help us understand early peoples.
  • Metalworking became more important.
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