Title: The Birth of Farming
1Neolithic Revolution
2Paleolithic Age
- Paleolithic Era Old Stone Age (2.6 million
years ago 10,000 BCE) - Hunter/Gatherer societies
- Nomadic Moved from place to place in search for
food. Humans populated the world this way - Men hunted
- Women gathered fruits, nuts, grains, etc.
- Way of Life
- Cave paintings
- Stone tools and pottery
- Domesticated dogs
3Neolithic Age
- Neolithic Era New Stone Age (10,000 BCE -
3,000 BCE) - Farming Neolithic Revolution
- People could remain in one place
- Herding of animals goats, sheep, cattle
- Community
- Council of Elders/Chief made important
decisions - Warrior class needed to protect land
- Kept possessions
4Neolithic Revolution - Farming
- Causes
- Food-gathering women notice seeds grow into new
plants - Food-gathering women notice that thinning results
in stronger plants - Game animals become scarce
- Agriculture Begins
- Immediate Effects
- Abandon nomadic way of life and settle in
villages - Acquire more possessions
- Develop new technologies
- Develop calendars
- Long-Term Effect/Immediate Cause
- Growth in population
- Immediate Effects
- More interaction among communities
- Increased warfare
- Long-Term Effects
- Women lose status
5Neolithic Revolution
- Çatalhöyük
- The largest and best preserved Neolithic
settlement found to date - Existed from 7500 BCE to 5700 BCE
- Revolution in Agriculture domestication of
plants and animals - The first permanent human settlements emerged
- Stone tools were still used by became polished
and made sharper by grinding - Pottery first began to appear
6Fertile Crescent
- End of the Last Ice Age
- Warming Climate
- Wild grasses abundant
- Wild Grasses closest to domesticated varieties
Tigris and Euphrates Rivers The area around
these rivers is known to history as Mesopotamia
7How did Agriculture Develop
- Availability of calories determines how people
get food - End of ice age ? Plants thriving
- Humans began helping plants along and selecting
for traits, to increase calories gathered - Certain plants were abundant and provided many
caloriesHumans actively chose these - Wheat
8Where and When
Location Dates (B.C.E) Plants Animals
Southwest Asia (Fertile Crescent) 9000-7000 Barley, wheat, lentils, figs Goats, sheep, cattle, pigs
China 6500-5000 Rice, millet, soybeans Pigs, chickens, water buffalo
Saharan and Sub-Saharan Africa 3000-2000 Sorghum, millet, yams, teff Cattle (perhaps 8000 B.C.E)
Highland New Guinea 7000-4000 Taro, bananas, yams, sugarcane
Andes region 3000-2000 Potatoes, quinoa, manioc Llamas, alpaca, guinea pig
Mesoamerica 3000-2000 Maize, squash (perhaps 7000 B.C.E), beans Turkey
Eastern woodlands of North America 2000-1000 Sunflower, goosefoot, sumpweed
9Origins of Agriculture
10What does the Neolithic Revolution allow?
- A sedentary lifestyle
- The need for cooperation and group effort
- Job specialization
- Social Hierarchies (Social classes)
- Patriarchy (Rule by males)
- Population Growth
11Results for Agricultural Society
- Now that you have possessions, what do you have
to do? - Kings- to direct
- Militaries to protect
- Priests to protect and record (BUREAUCRATS)
- Scribes and writing to protect and keep
accounts - Artisans- make storage vessels (pottery)