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The Neolithic Transition: The Domestication of Plants and Animals

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Title: Anthropology, Eleventh Edition Author: Stacy SCHOOLFIELD Last modified by: Melanie Cregger Created Date: 6/1/2004 4:02:22 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Neolithic Transition: The Domestication of Plants and Animals


1
Chapter 10
  • The Neolithic Transition The
    Domestication of Plants and Animals

2
Chapter Preview
  • When and Where Did the Change from Food Foraging
    to Food Production Begin?
  • Why Did the Change Take Place?
  • What Were the Consequences of the Neolithic
    Transition?

3
When and Where Did the Change from Food Foraging
to Food Production Begin?
4
Mesolithic Roots of Farming and Pastoralism
  • Refers to the Middle Stone Age of Europe and
    Southwest Asia began about 12,000 years ago.
  • The term Archaic cultures is used to refer to
    Mesolithic cultures in the Americas.

5
Mesolithic Roots of Farming and Pastoralism
  • After the extinction of Ice Age megafauna,
    hunters and gatherers expanded their repertoire
    of foods broad spectrum revolution
  • This broadening of the diet could not have been
    accomplished without the technological changes
    associated with microliths

6
Microliths
  • A small blade of flint or similar stone, several
    of which were hafted together in wooden handles
    to make tools.
  • Although a microlithic tradition existed in
    Central Africa by about 40,000 years ago, such
    tools did not become common elsewhere until the
    Mesolithic.

7
Microliths
  • Microliths could be attached to arrow or other
    tool shafts by using melted resin as a binder.
  • The Mesolithic peoples could make sickles,
    harpoons, arrows, knives, and daggers by fitting
    microliths into slots in wood, bone, or antler
    handles.

8
Natufians
  • The Natufians from Southwest Asia were the
    earliest Mesolithic people known to have stored
    plant foods.
  • Basin-shaped depressions are preserved in the
    rocks outside of their homes.

9
Natufians
  • Lived at a time of dramatically changing
    climates in the region.
  • Shallow lakes dried up, leaving just three in the
    Jordan River Valley.
  • The plants best adapted to instability and
    seasonal aridity were annuals, including wild
    cereal grains and legumes.

10
Natufians
  • Natufians modified their subsistence practices
  • Regularly fired the landscape to promote browsing
    by red deer and grazing by gazelles.
  • Placed greater emphasis on the collection of wild
    seeds from annual plants that could be stored
    through the dry season.

11
Neolithic
  • The New Stone Age began about 11,000 years ago
    in Southwest Asia.
  • The Neolithic revolution refers to the profound
    cultural changes which followed the domestication
    of plants and animals by peoples with stone-based
    technologies, beginning about 10,000 years ago

12
The Neolithic and Cultural Change
  • The cultural changes associated with the
    Neolithic took thousands of years to develop.
  • Not everyone changed at the same rate or at the
    same time.

13
The Neolithic and Cultural Change
  • The source of all these changes was innovation
    a new idea, method, or device that gains
    widespread acceptance in society.
  • (1) primary innovation the chance creation,
    invention, or discovery of a completely new idea,
    method, or device.
  • (2) secondary innovation the deliberate
    application or modification of an existing idea,
    method, or device.

14
Domestication
  • An evolutionary process whereby humans modify,
    intentionally or unintentionally, the genetic
    makeup of plants or animals, sometimes to the
    extent that members of the population are unable
    to survive and/or reproduce without human
    assistance.
  • Analysis of plant and animal remains at a site
    will indicate whether the occupants were food
    producers.

15
Evidence of Early Plant Domestication
  • Domesticated plants generally differ from their
    wild ancestors in the following ways
  • Increased size of edible parts
  • reduction or loss of natural means of seed
    dispersal
  • reduction or loss of protective devices such as
    husks or distasteful chemical compounds that keep
    animals from eating them
  • loss of delayed seed germination
  • development of simultaneous ripening of the seed
    or fruit.

16
Evidence of Early Animal Domestication
  • Domestication also produced changes in the
    skeletal structure of some animals
  • Most domesticated female sheep have no horns.
  • The size of an animal or its parts can vary with
    domestication as seen in the smaller size of
    certain teeth of domesticated pigs compared to
    those of wild ones.

17
Domestication of Maize
  • Teosinte (A), compared to 5,500-year-old maize
    (B) and modern maize (C).
  • Teosinte, the wild grass from highland Mexico
    from which maize originated, is far less
    productive and doesnt taste very good.
  • Domestication transformed it into something
    highly desirable.

18
Why Did the Change Take Place?
19
Beginnings of Domestication
  1. Food production was not the result of new
    discoveries about planting, people were very
    knowledgeable about plants and animals.
  2. The switch to food production did not free people
    from hard work.
  3. Food production is not necessarily a more secure
    means of subsistence than foraging.

20
Oasis Theory
  • Domestication began because the oasis attracted
    hungry animals.
  • The animals were too thin to eat, so people began
    to fatten them up.
  • Theory fell out of favor as studies of the
    origins of domestication were begun in the late
    1940s.

21
The Fertile Crescent
22
The Fertile Crescent
  • Domestication began in the Fertile Crescent.
  • Archaeological data suggest the domestication of
    rye as early as 13,000 years ago by people living
    at a site (Abu Hureyra) east of Aleppo, Syria,
    although wild plants and animals continued to be
    their major food sources.
  • Over the next several millennia they became
    full-fl edged farmers, cultivating rye and wheat.
  • By 10,300 years ago, others in the region were
    also growing crops.

23
Domestication of Sheep
  • Domestication of sheep resulted in evolutionary
    changes that created more wool.

24
Areas of Early Plant and Animal Domestication
  • Domestication also took place in the following
    areas
  • Southeast Asia
  • parts of the Americas (Central America, the
    Andean highlands, the tropical forests of South
    America, and eastern North America)
  • northern China
  • Africa

25
Areas of Early Plant and Animal Domestication
  • Southeast Asia is know for early rice cultivation
    and vegeculture the cultivation of domesticated
    root crops, such as yams and taro
  • As plant domestication increased, so did
    societies based horticulture cultivation of
    crops carried out with simple hand tools such as
    digging sticks or hoes.

26
Areas of Early Plant and Animal Domestication
  • Domestication took place in such widely
    scattered areas as Southwest Asia (A1), Central
    Africa (A2), China (B1), Southeast Asia (B2),
    Mesoamerica (C1), South America (C2), and North
    America (C3).

27
Nonedible Domesticates in Peru
  • In coastal Peru, the earliest domesticates were
    the non-edible bottle gourd (like the one shown
    to the left) and cotton.
  • They were used to make nets and floats to catch
    fish, which was an important source of food.

28
Subsistence Trends in Mexicos Tehuacan Valley
29
Chili Peppers in Mexico
  • In Mexico, chili peppers have been a part of the
    diet for millennia (esp. as a flavor enhancer).
  • This illustration from a 16th-century Aztec
    manuscript shows a woman threatening her child
    with punishment by being exposed to smoke from
    chili peppers.
  • Chili smoke was also used as a kind of chemical
    weapon in warfare.

30
Domestication Today
  • When first begun, domestication was the outcome
    of traditional food-foraging activities.
  • Today genetically engineered crops are being
    created to survive massive applications of
    herbicides and pesticides and not to produce
    viable seeds.

31
What Were the Consequences of the Neolithic
Transition?
32
Consequences of Domestication
  • Crops become more productive and more vulnerable.
  • Periodically population outstrips food supplies
    and people are apt to move into new regions.
  • In this way, farming has often spread from one
    region to another, as into Europe from Southwest
    Asia.

33
The Spread of Food Production
  • Although domestication increases productivity, it
    also increases instability.
  • Varieties with the highest yields become the
    focus of human attention, while other varieties
    are less valued and ultimately ignored.
  • Farmers become dependent on a rather narrow range
    of resources, compared to the wide range utilized
    by food foragers.

34
The Spread of Food Production
  • From Southwest Asia, for instance, farming spread
    northwestward eventually to all of Europe,
    westward to North Africa, and eastward to India.
  • Domesticated variants also spread from China and
    Southeast Asia westward.
  • Sorghum and other domesticates also spread from
    West Africa, to the southeast, creating the
    modern far-reaching
    distribution of speakers of Bantu languages.

35
The Spread of Food Production
  • Those who brought crops to new locations brought
    other things as well, including languages,
    beliefs, and new alleles for human gene pools.

36
Neolithic Culture Jericho
  • The best known Neolithic site is Jericho, a
    farming community in the Jordan River Valley of
    Palestine.
  • Excavations revealed the remains of a sizable
    farming community inhabited as early as 10,350
    years ago.
  • Crops could be grown almost continuously, due to
    the presence of a spring and the rich soils of an
    Ice Age lake that had dried up some 3,000 years
    earlier.
  • Flood-borne deposits originating in the Judean
    highlands to the west regularly renewed soil
    fertility.

37
Neolithic Culture Jericho
  • To protect against floods, mudflows, and
    invaders, the people of Jericho built massive
    walls of stone around it.
  • Inside the walls (6 1/2 feet wide and 12 feet
    high), as well as a large rock-cut ditch (27 feet
    wide and 9 feet deep), an estimated 400 to 900
    people lived in houses of mud brick with
    plastered floors arranged around courtyards.
  • A stone tower that would have taken 100 people
    104 days to build was located inside one corner
    of the wall.

38
Neolithic Culture Jericho
  • A cemetery reflects the sedentary life of these
    early people nomadic groups rarely buried their
    dead in a single central location.
  • Close contact between farmers of Jericho and
    other villages is indicated by common features in
    art, ritual, use of prestige goods, and burial
    practices.
  • Other evidence of trade consists of obsidian and
    turquoise from Sinai as well as marine shells
    from the coast, all discovered inside the walls
    of Jericho.

39
Neolithic Material Culture Technology
  • People developed scythes, forks, hoes, and plows
    to replace their simple digging sticks.
  • Pestles and mortars were used for preparation of
    grain.
  • Plows were redesigned when domesticated cattle
    became available for use as draft animals.

40
Neolithic Material Culture Pottery
  • Pottery vessels could be used for storing small
    grain, seeds, and other materials.
  • Pottery was also used for cooking, pipes, ladles,
    lamps, and other objects.
  • Some cultures used large vessels for disposal of
    the dead.
  • Widespread use of pottery is a good indication
    of a sedentary community.

41
Neolithic Material culture Pottery
  • This pottery vessel from Turkey was made around
    7,600 years ago. Pigs were under domestication as
    early as 10,500 to 11,000 years ago in
    southeastern Turkey.

42
Neolithic Material Culture Housing
  • Some Neolithic peoples constructed houses of
    wood, while others built elaborate shelters made
    of stone, sun-dried brick, or poles plastered
    together with mud or clay.
  • Although permanent housing frequently goes along
    with food production, there is evidence that
    housing could exist without food production.
  • On the northwestern coast of North America,
    people lived in houses made of heavy planks hewn
    from cedar logs, yet their food consisted
    entirely of wild plants.

43
Neolithic Material Culture Clothing
  • For the first time in history, clothing was made
    of woven textiles.
  • Raw materials came from
  • flax and cotton from farming
  • wool from domesticated sheep
  • silk from silk worms
  • spindle and loom from the human mind

44
Neolithic Architecture Stonehenge
  • Sometimes Neolithic villages created communal
    works. Stonehenge, England, dates back to about
    4,500 years ago. Its construction relates to the
    new attitudes toward the earth and forces of
    nature associated with food production.

45
Neolithic Social Structure
  • relatively egalitarian with minimal division of
    labor
  • some development of new and more specialized
    social roles
  • villages seem to have been made up of several
    households, each providing for most of its own
    needs
  • the organizational needs of society beyond the
    household level were probably met by kinship
    groups

46
The Neolithic and Human Biology
  • the teeth of Neolithic peoples show less wear
  • possible evidence of early dentistry (more dental
    decay?) in Pakistan
  • the bones of Neolithic peoples are less robust,
    and osteoarthritis (the result of stressed joint
    surfaces) is more common

47
The Neolithic and Human Biology
  • increased mal-nutrition (reliance on a few crops)
    and possibility of periodic famine
  • increased sedentism (permanently living in one
    place) created hygiene and sanitation issues
  • diseases acquired from domesticated animals

48
Diseases Acquired From Domesticated Animals
Human Disease Animal with Most Closely Related Pathogen
Measles Cattle (rinderpest)
Tuberculosis Cattle
Smallpox Cattle (cowpox) or other livestock with related pox viruses
Influenza Pigs, ducks
Pertussis (whooping cough) Pigs, dogs
49
The Legacy of the Neolithic
  • Led to the diversification of cultures (not
    simply progress or improvement)
  • Some societies practiced horticulture
    cultivation of crops carried out with simple hand
    tools such as digging sticks or hoes.
  • Others practiced agriculture intensive farming
    of large plots of land, employing fertilizers,
    plows, and/or extensive irrigation.
  • Still others adopted pastoralism a reliance on
    herds of domestic animals for their subsistence.
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