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HUMAN PREHISTORY PALEOLITHIC

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HUMAN PREHISTORY PALEOLITHIC & NEOLITHIC AGES Origins of Early Man The Paleolithic Age Prehistory period before written records Anthropologists study human culture ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: HUMAN PREHISTORY PALEOLITHIC


1
HUMAN PREHISTORYPALEOLITHIC NEOLITHIC AGES
2
Origins of Early Man
3
The Paleolithic Age
  • Prehistory
  • period before written records
  • Anthropologists
  • study human culture, reconstructing their lives
    so we can understand them better
  • Archaeologists
  • dig to search for objects so we can develop a
    better understanding of the past
  • The Paleolithic Age
  • Also known as the Old Stone Age
  • 2.5 million BCE 8,000 BCE
  • The Ice Age

4
Historical Overview
  • Human beings first emerge in East Africa
  • As they evolve, they develop complex technology
    and spread over most of the world
  • In some areas, people develop agriculture and
    settled villages, some of which eventually grow
    into complex cities and develop the five traits
    of civilization

5
4,000,000 B.C. First hominids appear in Africa.
1,600,000 B.C. Homo erectus appears.
8000 B.C. Neolithic Age begins first agriculture
takes place.
2600 B.C. City of Ur flourishes in Sumer
2,500,000 B.C. Paleolithic Age begins.
3000 B.C. Bronze Age begins in Mesopotamia.
40,000 B.C. Cro-Magnons appear
6
Human Origins in Africa
  • The first hominids emerge in East Africa about
    3.6 million years ago
  • They gradually develop large brains and learn to
    make tools and use fire, which allows them to
    spread over the earth.

7
Major Discoveries
  • Leakey family
  • family of paleontologists (fossil experts)
  • discovered that there were humanoids as much as 5
    million years ago in Eastern Africa
  • Donald Johanson
  • Lucy
  • first complete hominid discovered

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9
Early Hominids
10
Evolution of Hominids
11
Famous Caveman Personalities
12
Evolution of Prehistoric Man
  • Australopithecine
  • Southern Ape
  • Walked upright
  • Smaller brain than modern human
  • Homo Habilis
  • Handy Man
  • Began using crude stone tools for chopping and
    scraping
  • Brain was half that of modern humans
  • Homo Erectus
  • Upright Man
  • Used tools for digging, scraping cutting
  • First hominids to migrate
  • Used fire
  • Used broken language
  • Neanderthals
  • Powerfully built
  • Developed religious beliefs
  • Performed rituals
  • Exceptional survival hunting skills
  • Used early stone tools
  • hand ax
  • Learned to control fire and migrated out of
    Africa
  • Cro-Magnons
  • Structurally identical to modern humans
  • Planned hunts
  • Advanced languages
  • Beat-out Neanderthals for survival
  • Migrated around the world
  • Used a variety of tools, learned to create fire,
    likely the first to develop language

13
Paleolithic Lifestyle
  • Hunting and Gathering
  • Use wild animals and plants for food
  • Migrate seasonally
  • Live in family or tribal groups - Clans

14
Hunting Gathering
  • Advantages
  • The land supplies whatever is needed.
  • Movement is easier when food is scarce.
  • Life encourages cooperation and language skills.
  • Special weapons and tools develop for hunting and
    digging up plants.
  • Disadvantages
  • People are always searching for new food sources.
  • It is more difficult to store food.
  • People must carry everything along when
    traveling.
  • Only simple social organization was possible.

15
Early Homo Sapiens
  • Simple Tools
  • Sharpened rocks or tools fashioned from wood,
    plant fibers, animal skin, hair and bone.
  • Invented spears for easier hunting.
  • Other tools included the bow and arrow, fishing
    hooks, canoes, needles for sewing
  • People were hunter-gatherers
  • Dependent on resources and conditions provided by
    their environment.
  • Pack mentality survival of the group
    necessitated sharing the products produced and
    resources with all the group members.

16
Early Neolithic Civility
  • The need for food, clothing and shelter
    controlled the actions of the group.
  • Most groups were probably nomadic, following
    seasonal migrations of their prey
  • Groups based on extended families which combined
    into clans and tribes (30-50 members).
  • Gender specialization
  • Male hunted and made tools
  • Women gathered food, made fabric and utensils,
    tended the camp (fire) and were responsible for
    rearing the children
  • Burial sites with offerings show the development
    of a belief system that believed in the
    afterlife.
  • Cave paintings show belief in magic that could be
    used to influence fertility and availability of
    food.
  • Competition likely existed between
    hunting/gathering groups

17
Evolution of Paleolithic Tools
Homo Habilis Tools
Homo Egaster Tools
Homo Neanderthalensis Tools
Homo Sapiens Tools Upper Paleolithic Era 90,000
BC (Africa) 40,000 BC 12,000 BC elsewhere
18
Migration Settlement
BERINGIA
19
Early Migration
  • Early human ancestors began to migrate around 1.6
    million years ago.
  • Due to long periods of freezing temperatures, ice
    sheets covered the land and lowered the oceans
    level (Ice Ages)
  • These ice sheets created land bridges
  • Eventually early hominids died out and humans
    began to migrate, peopling all the continents by
    9000 BC (except Antarctica).

20
Clovis Sites
  • Some of the earliest people to inhabit the
    Americas.
  • Clovis sites are name because of the Clovis tools
    found at the archeological sites
  • Spear points are fluted which allows for easier
    attachment to a wooden shaft
  • Clovis people were probably proficient hunters
    though they also gathered roots, seeds and
    berries.

21
Thought Question
  • Which of the following skills toolmaking, the
    use of fire, or the development of language do
    you think gave hominids the most control over
    their environment?
  • Things to think about
  • the kinds of tools early humans developed
  • the various uses of fire
  • the benefits of language
  • Toolmaking, because it enabled hominids to hunt
    game and build shelters.
  • Fire, because it allowed hominids to survive in
    cold climates.
  • Language, because it helped hominids coordinate
    hunts and other tasks.

22
Extinction of the Megafauna
  • Why did the megafauna disappear?
  • Inability to adjust to major climatic
    changesthough they had adjusted in the past
  • Appearance of humans who hunted animals to
    extinction
  • Animals had not coevolved with humans (as they
    did in Africa and places in Asia). This
    prevented them from developing significant fear
    of humans.
  • Humans in some places could just walk up to
    animals and kill them.

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24
Evolving Lifestyles Paleolithic Era to the
Neolithic Era
  • Neolithic Lifestyle Settled Communities
  • Raise herds of tame animals
  • Plant seeds and raise crops
  • Live in permanent settlements

25
How this all changes
26
Neolithic Tool Making
  • USING TOOLS TO MAKE TOOLS
  • Blades and spear points become highly refined
  • Use of bone tools

27
Neolithic Innovations
  • Simple homes built from available materials
  • Simple pottery with or without decorative artwork
  • Beads and other forms of jewelry
  • Artifacts representing gods or spirits

28
More Neolithic Innovations
29
Settled Communities
  • Advantages
  • Crops provide a reliable food supply.
  • Population grows as life becomes more complex.
  • Societies become more complex.
  • Trade increases and commerce develops.
  • Division of labor allows workers to specialize.
  • Disadvantages
  • Crop failures due to weather or pests cause
    famines.
  • Floods, fire, or even raiders could destroy
    villages.
  • Disease spreads easily when people live together.

30
Farming
  • Occurred in a number of places at the same time
  • Americas, Middle East, China, West Africa
  • Began about the same time the last ice age ended
  • Barley and wheat appeared with warmer weather
  • As the population increased, people required more
    food.
  • Experimentation with planting seeds and selective
    breeding
  • Animals such as dogs, cattle, goats, pigs and
    sheep were domesticated early

31
Farming Impacts
  • Increases standard of living
  • better diet
  • more resources
  • sharing of skills/jobs
  • leads to threat of invasion
  • must continue to organize and specialize to
    defend against threats

32
Foundations for Civilizations
  • More food could be raised in an area
  • Surpluses lead to
  • Increased carrying capacity of a region
  • Sustainable population
  • Both human and animal
  • Farming led to settlement and creation of early
    towns and villages.
  • Hunting and gathering was replaced
  • Domestication first civilizations arose

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34
Direct Impact of Agriculture
35
Five Characteristics of Civilizations
What makes a civilization?
  • Advanced Cities
  • Specialized Workers
  • Complex Institutions
  • Record Keeping
  • Advanced Technology

36
Advanced Cities
  • Became the political, economic, and cultural
    centers for surrounding areas
  • Begin around river valleys in ancient
    civilizations
  • Ur and Uruk near the Tigris and Euphrates rivers
  • Memphis on the Nile River
  • Mohenjo Daro on the Indus River
  • Anyang near the Huang He

37
Advanced Technology
  • Many ancient civilizations faced natural
    foreign adversity
  • Irrigation needs, flooding prevention, lack of
    natural barriers, unpredictable weather patterns,
    lack of natural resources, etc.
  • Growing population demanded a need to improvise
    and invent new ways for the society to survive
  • Necessity is the mother of all invention
  • Societies that adapted and invented survived
  • Earthen walls, irrigation ditches, raised fields,
    terrace farming, aqueducts

38
Complex Institutions
  • Formal religious institutions that included
    ceremonies, rituals, and other forms of worship
  • People built large temples and participated in
    various ceremonies to please the gods
  • Religious leaders often interpreted the will of
    the gods
  • Priests became powerful figures
  • Competed for power
  • Government, Religion, Social Class Systems
  • Building large irrigation systems and feeding a
    growing population required planning, decision
    making, and cooperation
  • Supervise food production and building projects
  • Social order based on peoples occupations,
    wealth, and influence
  • Rulers, priests, and nobles had the most power
    and ranked highest in the social order
  • Merchants and artisans usually ranked next
  • Farmers and unskilled workers, who made up the
    majority of the people, ranked next
  • Enslaved people at bottom of the society

39
Specialized Workers
  • As cities became more complex, the division of
    labor increased and many new jobs developed
  • Officials gathered taxes, engineers planned
    irrigation systems, soldiers defended city walls,
    farmers raised crops, laborers built large public
    works, such as temples and roads

40
Record Keeping
  • As life in early cities grew increasingly
    complex, people needed ways to keep permanent
    records
  • Merchants needed to keep records of trade goods
  • Officials needed to track tax payments
  • Sumer used clay tokens and pouches to keep
    records.
  • The Inca used knotted colored strings
  • Systems of writing began to develop about 5,000
    years ago
  • First writing used pictographs, or picture
    symbols, to represent objects or ideas
  • More advanced writing systems invented that used
    abstract symbols to express a wider range of
    ideas
  • Early civilizations began to create a written
    record of their society
  • Provide historians with a wealth of information
    about early civilizations
  • Calendars
  • People needed to track the changing of the
    seasons and when it was time to plant or harvest
  • Early river valley civilizations also needed to
    know when yearly floods would occur
  • Based on the phases of the moon, which were easy
    for early people to see and track
  • Were inaccurate because the lunar year is many
    days shorter than the solar year

41
Thought Question
  • Why do you think the development of agriculture
    occurred around the same time in several
    different places?
  • Think about
  • the migrations of early peoples
  • changes in the earths climate
  • a rise in human population

Global warming trends resulted in longer growing
seasons a rich supply of grain helped support a
population boom. A rise in population placed
pressure on hunter-gatherers, who had migrated
throughout the world, to find new sources of food.
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