Title: Prehistory Learning Packet
1Prehistory Learning Packet
- Cultures and Civilizations began in Prehistoric
Times
2Examining Prehistory
- People who study the skeletal remains of early
humanlike creatures and try to determine how they
look are called anthropologists.
- People who excavate ancient settlements and study
artifacts are called archeologists.
3Compare/Contrast
Anthropologist or Archeologist?
4Examples of Artifacts
Buildings
Artwork
Furniture
Coins
Clothing
Toys
Weapons
Tools
5Prehistory Continued
- 4. Culture is what a human group acquires through
living together and includes language, knowledge,
skills, art, literature, laws, and lifestyles.
- 5. Prehistoric remains are assigned a date by
using Radiocarbon Dating.
6Early Humanlike Creatures
- Anthropologists now know what humanlike creatures
looked like millions of years ago.
- The oldest skeletal remains that have been found
are over 3 million years old. It was discovered
in 1974, and became known as Lucy.
7The First People
- Anthropologists have excavated bones to describe
how the first people looked.
- The characteristics of the first humans are very
strong and powerful jaws, sharply receding chins,
and low foreheads, and heavy eyebrow ridges.
8The First People II
- 3. These people were vegetarians and sometimes
used caves for shelter.
- 4. Later they added meat to their diet as they
started to hunt animals.
9The First People III
- 5. As they became better hunters, they started to
migrate over great distances in search of food.
- 6. Human populations started expanding from
Africa to Asia.
10The Ice Ages
- 4 times in the last 1.5 million years, the earth
has had periods of extremely cold weather.
- Each time, the northern polar ice cap moved south
and joined glaciers.
- Each ice age lasted from 10,000 to 50,000 years.
11The Ice Ages II
- 4. People began to migrate to warmer Ice Free
areas. This also resulted in the extinction of
many plants and animals.
- 5. The sea levels dropped because so much water
was frozen in the ice caps. This resulted in the
creation of land bridges that temporarily
connected North America to Asia.
12The Ice Ages III
- 6. Prehistoric people did not move into cold
regions until they first learned to use fire and
make warm clothes.
13Neanderthal People
- Anthropologists have discovered Neanderthal
remains in caves in many parts of Europe, Asia,
and Middle East.
- Neanderthals are humans that lived 30,000 to
100,000 years ago.
- Neanderthals are famous for using fire, making
clothes from animal skins.
- They were also the first humans to hunt and bury
their dead.
14Cro-Magnon People
- After Neanderthals disappeared, the Cro-Magnon
people emerged about 35,000 years ago.
- They made many tools and were the people who
invented the spear.
15The Middle Stone Age
- 1. This era began at the end of the last Ice Age
and led to the development of agriculture and
domestication of animals. (THIS WAS THE AGE OF
NEANDERTHAL AND CRO-MAGNON PEOPLE)
16The New Stone Age
- This time period is called the Neolithic Age and
they were the first to settle in permanent
villages because of two important developments
- Taming of different animals
- Development of Agriculture
- 2. This shift from a food gathering to a food
planting society is called the Neolithic
Revolution.
17Patterns of Living Paleolithic Period to the
Neolithic Revolution
- Lifestyle Advantages Disadvantages
- Hunting and Gathering
- Wild animals and plants for food.
- Migrating
- Live with family or tribe.
- Land supplies what is needed.
- Movement is easier.
- Encourages cooperation and language.
- Tools developed for hunting and digging.
- Always searching for food.
- Food is hard to store.
- People must carry everything while traveling.
- Only simple social organization possible.
18Patterns of Living Paleolithic Period to the
Neolithic Revolution II
- Lifestyle Advantages Disadvantages
- Settled Communities
- Raised animals.
- Plants, seeds, and crops.
- Lived in permanent settlements.
- Crops provide a reliable food supply
- Population growth
- Societies become more complex.
- Trade increases.
- Division of labor allows workers to specialize.
- Crop failures due to weather or pests causes
famines.
- Floods, fire, or invaders could destroy
villages.
- Disease spreads easier when people live together.
19Artifact Analysis
- In groups of 3-4 students analyze the envelope of
artifacts.
- Have one member of your group complete the
Artifact Analysis Worksheet.
- Have another member of the group report your
findings to the class in 5 minutes.
20Todays Assignment- Pages 7-11 of your packet
STOP
Prehistory Test- Thursday, August 28th (A-Days)
Friday, August 29th (B-Days)
21Prehistoric People Chart- page 12
22Prehistoric People Chart- page 12
23Prehistoric People Chart- page 12
24Prehistoric People Chart- page 12
25Todays Assignment- pages 13-15 in your packet.
STOP
- Prehistory Unit Test- Next Thursday (A-Days),
Next Friday (B-Days)
- Study Session- Wednesday (A-Days), Thursday
(B-Days)
26The First Civilizations (p.16)
Asia
27Where were the 1st Civilizations?
28Environmental Factors Shape River Valley
Civilizations- pg. 17
CAUSE
EFFECT
People would settle in areas with water and
fertile soil for farming
The earliest civilizations formed in river valleys
Sumerians built fortified cities to help villages
protect themselves.
Sumerian villages were located on open plains
without natural barriers.
29CAUSE
EFFECT
The Nile River flowed through Upper and Lower
Egypt.
The Nile River helped unify the peoples of Upper
and Lower Egypt
Mountains and deserts were barriers to invasion,
which led to an enduring Chinese culture.
Chinas landforms featured mountains and deserts.
Trade developed between the Indus River
Civilization and other cultures.
The Indus River connected its civilization to the
sea.
30Four River Valleys- page 18
- 2. In the four river valleys mentioned, people
developed the advanced form of culture known as
civilization, which means
- A culture that becomes highly developed
- 3. The five major characteristics of most
civilizations are
- Advanced technical skills
- Development of a calendar
- Some form of government
- Division of Labor
- Development of Writing
31Learning to Use Metals
- Just 6,000 years ago, people in the Nile and the
Tigris-Euphrates River Valleys knew how to make
copper weapons and tools.
- Copper tools finally failed because it is soft
and loses sharpness.
- The next major metal to be used by the people of
the Nile was bronze. It is considered an alloy
because it is a mixture of copper and tin. The
invention of bronze marked the end of the Stone
Age and the beginning of the Bronze Age. - About 3,200 years ago, people in Southwestern
Asia made an even stronger metal called iron ore
to produce weapons and tools, thus ending the
Bronze Age and starting the Iron Age.
32Irrigation, Government, and Cities
- Because the four major river valleys were exposed
to a rainy period every year, hot and dry
conditions would prevail throughout the rest of
the year. - This caused a problem for farmers considering
they had to get water to crops during the dry
season.
- Farmers ended up digging ditches and canals to
transport water to their fields. This was the
first development of irrigation systems.
33Irrigation, Government, and Cities II
- 4. In an attempt to control floods, farmers had
to build dikes to keep the rivers within their
banks.
- 5. With everyone lending a hand throughout this
time period of irrigation, people had to learn to
work together.
- 6. Because so many people were working together,
they needed rules to govern their behavior. This
led to a system of government to plan, regulate,
and direct their work. Along with this,
population growth was on the rise which began to
turn these villages into cities.
34Division of Labor- page 19
- Because the methods of farming were becoming
advanced, more people were free to do other
jobs.
- People were able to concentrate on one particular
skill, thus creating a class of skilled craft
workers known as the artisans. Other new job
titles included merchants and traders. - The movement of many merchants and traders led to
a spreading of certain parts of cultures from one
area of the world to another called cultural
diffusion.
35Developing a Calendar
- With the interest of farming, people began
observing the changes of the seasons. One way
they could develop a method of time was to
observe the moon and its changes along with the
flooding. - It was deemed that one new moon to the next would
be a month. Twelve of these lunar months would
equal a year.
36The Invention of Writing
- 1. Speech no longer sufficed as the only means of
communication. People needed a written language
to preserve and pass on ideas and information.
The long and complex process of the development
of writing can be summarized by these four chief
steps
37A pictogram is a picture that represents a thing.
An ideogram is a picture that represents an idea.
A phonogram is a picture that represents a sound.
An alphabet is a picture that represents a
consonant or vowel.
38Assignment pages 20-24 in packet
STOP
Prehistory Unit Test- Next Class Meeting! Study
Session Tomorrow!