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What is prehistory?

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Georgia s Prehistoric Periods The Paleo Period Dates 10,000-8,000 B.C. Weapons ... used to propel spears long distances Food Large game hunted animals ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: What is prehistory?


1
What is prehistory?
  • Umthe history before history

2
PREHISTORY before written records were kept
  • 1st system of writing Africa 6,000 years ago (
    4,000 BC)
  • Oral traditions older persons in the family/
    group repeated tales of past events to younger
    generations until they learned them by heart
  • Beliefs, traditions, folklore passed down from
    generation to generation through stories
  • Later civilizations recorded events on cave walls
    and animal hides with symbols that later evolved
    into a system of writing

3
So how did the first humans come to the Americas?
Asia
North America
4
Beringia an icey land bridge
North America
5
Why did they come here?
6
(No Transcript)
7
WHEN did they come here?
8
Essential Questions
  • How did changes over time in prehistoric Indian
    technology and food affected Indian settlement
    patterns?
  • How did changes in settlement patterns affect
    religious practices?

9
Georgias Prehistoric Periods
10
The Paleo Period
Paleo Very old / few lived
to be 30 yrs. old
  • Dates
  • 10,000-8,000 B.C.
  • Weapons
  • Clovis points
  • Stone spear points
  • Knives and scrapers
  • Atlatl used to propel spears long distances
  • Food
  • Large game hunted animals
  • Mammoths, bisons, ground sloths, and mastadons
  • Wild berries and nuts gathered
  • Dwellings
  • Lived in groups of 25-50
  • Always on the move for food (nomadic) no
    permanent housing
  • Slept in caves, under cliffs, and dug out
    sleeping pits
  • Religion
  • Artifacts to suggest general spirituality
    nothing specific

11
Snapshots of Paleo-Indian Life
12
The Archaic Period
Things becoming more settled
  • Dates
  • 8,000 1,000 B.C.
  • Weapons
  • New tools invented to save time and effort (ex.
    weighted spear, grinding stone)
  • Clovis points become smaller and sharper for
    smaller game
  • Grooved Axe stone head w/ wood handle. Used
    primarily to chop wood / remove brush
  • Food
  • Hunted smaller game as period progresses
  • Deer, bear, turkey, rabbit, birds, fish
  • Fishing and gathering important
  • Large remains of middens (trash heaps of shells )
    found on Stallings Island in GA
  • Clay pots to store and transport food in created
  • Dwellings
  • Small groups gathered to form larger groups of
    50-100
  • Would move from season to season
  • Semi-permanent housing w/ wooden poles covered by
    animal hides, braches, and bark
  • Religion
  • Proper burial of the dead seems to be important
  • Tools, weapons, and ornaments found in tombs

13
Snapshots of Archaic-Indian Life
14
The Woodland Period
The Mound-Builders!
  • Dates
  • 1,000 B.C. 1,000 A.D.
  • Weapons
  • Bow and Arrow better accuracy/saves time
  • Arrowheads become smaller and sharper
  • Food
  • Beginning of Horticulture (farming)
  • Seeds are saved for planting
  • Nuts, corn, squash, and bottle-gourd
  • Small game hunted
  • Developed clay pottery that lasted longer
  • Dwellings
  • More sturdy houses (huts) as small groups join
    together and form tribes
  • Flat-topped mounds for gathering/ceremonies
  • Animal effigy mounds Rock Eagle created in 200
    A.D.
  • Religion
  • Burial mounds with more elaborate tombs
    containing jewelry, pottery, figurines, and
    ceremonial objects suggests belief in life after
    death

15
Snapshots of Woodland-Indian Life
Evidence of long-distance trading
16
The Mississippian Period
  • Dates
  • 1,000 A.D. 1,600 A.D.
  • Weapons
  • All tools and weapons from previous periods
    only better-made and more effective
  • Food
  • Farmed most food
  • Corn, beans, pumpkin, and squash (tobacco for
    ceremonies)
  • Used slash-and-burn technique
  • Prepare land with bone/stone hoes
  • Stored food in storehouses for constant supply
  • Dwellings
  • Large-scale communities w/ palisades and moats
  • Several 1,000 families living together
  • Wattle and daub houses made of clay and wood
  • Mound communities like Etowah and Ocmulgee
  • Religion
  • Priest-chief presides over religious ceremonies
  • Religious aspects controlled by govt.

17
Snapshots of Mississippian-Indian Life
18
End of Prehistory?
  • Prehistory ends in Georgia with the arrival of
    Spanish-Explorer Hernando deSoto. (around 1539)
  • Beginning of traditional European written records
    of GA

19
Essential Questions
  • How did changes over time in prehistoric Indian
    technology and food affected Indian settlement
    patterns?
  • How did changes in settlement patterns affect
    religious practices?

20
  • SETTLEMENT
  • WEAPONS/ TOOLS
  • RELIGION
  • FOOD
  • Proper burial of the dead
  • Buried with objects
  • afterlife
  • Religious ceremonies
  • Ceremonial mounds
  • Burial mounds
  • tombs
  • Priest chiefs
  • Nomadic (always moving)
  • Semi-permanent huts
  • Seasonal movement
  • Permanent houses
  • Large villages
  • Bands of people (25-50)
  • Tribes (more than 100)
  • Spear
  • Atalatal
  • Smaller spear points
  • Grooved axe
  • Bow arrow
  • Pottery
  • Hunter/ gather
  • Large animals (Mammoth)
  • Nuts/berries
  • Small game (deer/rabbits)
  • Agriculture (growing food)
  • Farming
  • Beans, squash, corn
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