Innovation Sites - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 53
About This Presentation
Title:

Innovation Sites

Description:

Innovation Sites Cultural Hearths that are not river valley sites – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:112
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 54
Provided by: SOCS46
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Innovation Sites


1
Innovation Sites
  • Cultural Hearthsthat are not river valley sites

2
River Valley Theory
3
Early Civilizations
4
Americas
5
AmericasPhysical Map
6
Mesoamerica
7
(No Transcript)
8
Early People of MesoamericaHow do these dates
compare?
  • 8000BCE-7000BCE earliest farming
  • Beans, chili peppers, avocados, squash, gourds
  • 4000BCE - Maize
  • 3000BCE agricultural villages
  • Domesticated animals included turkeys, dogs no
    draft animals, thus no wheeled vehicles
  • 2000BCE
  • elaborate ceremonial centers (pyramids, temples,
    palaces)

9
(No Transcript)
10
(No Transcript)
11
(No Transcript)
12
(No Transcript)
13
Early Societies South America
  • 12,000BCE hunters and gatherers into South
    America (deer, llama, alpaca)
  • Mountainous and coastal regions
  • Cool, moist climate provided natural harvests
    (squash, gourds, potatoes)
  • 8,000BCE changing climate led to agriculture,
  • 2500BCE 2000BCE first permanent settlements
    along coast
  • Cultivated beans, peanuts, sweet potatoes, cotton
  • Later settlements in the highlands
  • 1000BCE some evidence of complex societies

14
(No Transcript)
15
(No Transcript)
16
(No Transcript)
17
Important Geography Notes
  • Climate mirror image
  • Sub Saharan Development is different than
    Mediterranean Coast
  • Limited Natural Harbors
  • River travel is difficult cataracts, reversing
    and underground currents
  • Uneven distribution of resources
  • Soils for farming only adequate in certain areas

18
Who were the earliest, innovative people of
Mesoamerica and ofSouth America?Is Gordon
Childes 10 point model supported by their
beginnings?
19
Was there an innovative site of civilization?
What does the evidence suggest?Are they too,
a study in the 10 point model?
20
Uncovering the mysterious beginnings of
Mesoamerica, South America and Sub-Saharan Africa
  • 3500 BCE 600BCE

21
What did we discover?
  • What locations deserve the designation Innovative?

22
AMERICAS
23
Mesoamerican Legacy
  • How do the archeological remains support our
    understanding (and justification) of the
    Mesoamerican innovative site?
  • Which group is the innovative people?
  • How would you organize the details into a
    coherent understanding of historical development
    for the area?
  • Does the evidence pose problems for Childs 10
    point model?

24
(No Transcript)
25
MESOAMERICA
26
Olmecs
  • Lowland Coast of the Gulf of Mexico
  • Abundant rainfall no need for extensive
    irrigation, but
  • elaborate drainage- chinampas, pot irrigation
  • Slash and burn
  • Elaborate temples, pyramids, stone sculptures,
    jade animal impressions, tombs
  • Probably authoritarian
  • Military Force local chiefs
  • Elite classes in ceremonial center - cities

27
Impact of Olmecs
  • After 400BCE?
  • No written records beyond calendar inscriptions
  • Olmec traditions diffused
  • (possibly through trade)
  • Rituals, pyramids, calendar
  • Heirs to the Olmecs

28
Development of Teotihuacan
MESOAMERICA
  • 500 BCE Valley of Mexico
  • Lakes
  • abundant supplies of fish, waterfowl as well as
    fresh water and opportunities for transportation
  • Water channeled into fields for agriculture
  • Thriving metropolis Very Urban
  • temples, residential neighborhoods, busy markets,
    workshops
  • Little written records paintings murals
  • POSSIBLE Theocracy- pyramids

29
(No Transcript)
30
Teotihuacan Society
MESOAMERICA
  • CLASSES Priests, artisans, merchants,
    cultivators
  • TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENT
  • Obsidian tools, orange pottery
  • TRADE Extensive networks throughout region
    possible colonial arrangements
  • Little evidence of military or conquest
  • Olmec cultural foundations
  • writing, calendar, sacrifices
  • Decline after 650CE purposefully burned

31
Development of the Maya
MESOAMERICA
  • 2000bce earliest evidence
  • 300BCE Highlands of Guatemala fertile soil
  • 300 900 CE Mesoamerican lowlands
  • Terrace farming trapped silt from rivers
  • Genuine cities developed into City state system
    (Tikal and Chichen Itza)
  • 80 large ceremonial centers
  • Continuous fighting -Human sacrifices
  • Chichen Itza (900-1000CE) loosely organized empire

32
(No Transcript)
33
Maya Society Religion
MESOAMERICA
  • Social Classes (Large priestly class, Hereditary
    landowning noble class, Merchant class from
    nobles and ruling elite, Architects, artisans,
    peasant, slaves)
  • INNOVATIONS/TRADITIONS
  • Mathematical knowledge (concept of zero)
  • Astronomy solar year -365.242
  • Maya scribes hieroglyphics (history, poetry,
    myth, administration, astronomical records) only
    4 remain
  • Creation story Popol Vuh

34
Contact with Mesoamerica?
ANDEAN REGION
  • South developed largely independently
  • Geography discouraged contact
  • Communication within Andean region difficult
  • Several agricultural products and technologies
    diffused slowly
  • Maize and squash to South America
  • Gold, silver, copper metallurgy to Mesoamerica

35
South America Andean Region
  • Who is the innovative site?
  • How, and why did they develop in this mountainous
    region?
  • What major development center to our
    understanding contradicts the 10 point model?

36
(No Transcript)
37
SIPAN, Moche Culture 1987
38
Chavin Cult
ANDEAN REGION
  • Development of agriculture ceremonial centers
    2000BCE in dry coastal regions
  • Large populations served as stimulus for
    emergence of fertility cult
  • Temple complexes, elaborate works of art
  • Intricate stone carvings (jaguars, hawks, eagles,
    snakes)
  • Weavers, metal craftsmen
  • Increasing complexity 200BCE large cities
    (public buildings, extensive residential
    districts)

39
Mochica State
ANDEAN REGION
  • Valleys of Western Andes
  • Complex society with considerable specialization
    of labor (300 700 CE)
  • No writing system evidence through art
  • Regional kingdom created through force
  • Integrated economic zones (highlands, central
    valley and coastal regions) Vertical trade
  • Highlands (potatoes, llama meat, alpaca wool)
  • Central valley (maize, bean, squash)
  • Coasts (fish, cotton)

40
ANDEAN REGION
41
Was there a civilization that developed
independently? How should we define urban?
Sub-Saharan Africa
42
(No Transcript)
43
SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
EAST AFRICA Kingdom of Kush In Nubia Capital at
Meroe 1700BCE- 500 Kingdom of Aksum 4th cent BCE
44
Kush Aksum
45
Great Zimbabwe
  • Sacred house
  • Peak - late 11th Century (DISC. 19TH c)
  • Questions surrounding ability to sustain sizeable
    population? (Trade)
  • East African Connections

46
AFRICA
Later development significantly influenced by
Trans-Saharan Trade and camel caravans
47
Nok culture, city at Ife, Yoruba People
AFRICA
  • Sahel Region
  • 1000 BCE
  • Strong cultural tradition
  • Mythological cities?

48
(No Transcript)
49
(No Transcript)
50
Jenne-Jeno
  • Earliest settlement 3rd Century BCE
  • Great interior floodplain of the Middle Niger,
  • rich alluvial soil
  • well-suited to the cultivation of rice
  • worked iron, fashioning the metal into both
    jewelry and tools
  • By 450 CE, over 60 acres
  • Central inhabited area surrounded by a city wall
  • 40 smaller additional settlements
  • 13,000 inhabitants
  • The archaeology of Jenne- jeno and the
    surrounding area show an early, indigenous growth
    of trade and social complexity. (Yet, lack of a
    state?)

51
Why is this significant in the development of
Sub-Saharan Africa ?
  • Predates Mediterranean and European outside
    influences!

http//www.eduplace.com/kids/socsci/ca/books/bkf3/
imaps/AC_06_206_bantu/AC_06_206_bantu.html
52
Migrations
  • Language Group
  • 1000BCE 1000CE
  • Out of Central West Africa -to- South and East
  • Diffusion of ideas, resources throughout Africa
  • Iron Metallurgy
  • Agricultural Knowledge
  • Plantains, yams, bananas

53
Bantu Migrations Significance to the modern era
  • The Bantu - 2/3 of Africa's population, (south
    and east)
  • language group not a distinct ethnic group.
  • The most widely spoken Bantu-derived language is
    Swahili, which is used by up to 50 million
    speakers on the eastern coast of Africa.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com