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Section 1
The First People
Chapter 1 The Beginnings of Civilization
Prehistory to 1000 BC
                                           1
Anthropologists



• Anthropologists
  study culture and
  artifacts                              Archaeologists




                                                                        New findings are
                                                 Excavate sites to
                       Studies human                                   constantly revising
                                                 find objects that
                      material remains                                  our knowledge of
                                                will give them clues
                                                                             history




Studying the Distant Past                                                                2
• Key Discoveries
  • Mary Leakey finds “Nutcracker Skull” in East Africa. 1.75
    million years old.
  • Donald Johanson found partial skeleton called Lucy in
    Ethiopia.
  • ML finds footprints in Tanzania - oldest evidence of
    hominids walking upright. 3.5 million years old
  • 2001 skull resembling both Australopithicine and
    chimpanzee found in Central Africa. 6-7 million years old
  • Walking upright = free to use hands for handling tools




Human Origins                                                   3
• Modern Humans
 • Everyone today is a Homo sapien, means “wise man.” Had
   larger brains than earlier species
 • Developed sophisticated tools, shelter, and learned to use
   fire
 • May be the first with spoken
   language because of
   increased brain function
   •   Cooperate
   •   Hunt in groups
   •   Resolve issues
   •   Form stronger relationships
       and interact with others


Human Origins                                                   4
• Early humans began to move because of the change in
  climate.
• 1.6 million years ago, earth cycled between cold and
  warm periods revealing new areas of land. (Ice Age)
• Ability to walk upright and control fire enabled migration
  out of Africa into the other continents. By 9000 BC
  humans spread to all but Antarctica




Spreading
Around the World                                           5
• Adaptation to new environments causes genetic variety
• One view – two groups of modern humans
  • Neanderthals (200,000-30,000 years ago). Died out. May
    not have been homo sapiens
  • Cro-Magnons (40,000 years ago).
    Sturdy and muscular, looked
    like humans today. Made tools,
    and had better hunting and
    survival skills




Spreading
Around the World                                             6
• First humans lived in the Paleolithic Era, the early part of the Stone
  Age – people made tools from stone (2.5 million to 10,000 years ago)
• People were nomadic, hunted and gathered food, and men and
  women were equal
• Later learned to work with wood and bone. Led to better tools which
  improved hunting
• Other tools:
   •   string from plant fiber = net for fish and small animals
   •   Bow and arrow, bone hooks, fishing spears
   •   Canoe for travel
   •   Needle from bone = animal skin clothing, shoes, hats, carrying sacks



Life in the
Stone Age                                                                     7
• Began to form societies of shared cultures, which
  included language, art, and spiritual beliefs
• Cro-Magnons and other Stone Age people produced a
  variety of art from coal, clay, and iron
• Scholars unsure about meaning of art. Anthropologists
  think they practiced animism, belief that all things in
  nature have spirits.



Life in the
Stone Age                                                   8
1.   What methods are used to study the distant past?
2.   What does evidence suggest about human origins?
3.   How did early people spread around the world?
4.   How did early people adapt to life in the Stone Age?




READING CHECK!                                              9
Section 2
The Beginning of
Agriculture
Chapter 1 The Beginnings of Civilization
Prehistory to 1000 BC
                                           10
• New tools that were polished and grinded instead of
  chipped led to Neolithic Era – New Stone Age
• 10,000 years ago, people learned to farm. Turning point
  because it changed the way people lived.
• Plants – learned to grow the best seeds and domesticated
  wild plants to produce larger food supplies




Development of Agriculture                                   11
• Domesticated animals led to larger and more reliable food
  supply
  • Dogs among the first. Used for hunting and guarding
  • Cattle, goats, pigs, and sheep used for meat, milk, and
    clothing
  • Large animals used for pulling heavy loads and farming
• The development of agriculture and domestication of
  animals happened independently around the world at
  different times. It spread slowly through trade and travel.


Development
of Agriculture                                                12
• By 6000 BC, early farming led to growth of villages and
  cities as more people settled together. Led to:
  • Job specialization – people performing different tasks in the
    group
  • Extra food for trade
  • Differences in social status because of wealth and influence
  • Religion
  • War with other societies for more land and resources
  • Spread of diseases like flu, measles, and smallpox




Agriculture Changes Society 13
• New technologies
  • Use of animals and new tools led to better farming and food
    preparation techniques (like pottery for cooking and storing
    food)
  • Learned to spin yarn from wool of goats and sheep to make
    blankets and clothes
  • Learned to use metal, first copper then bronze (a mix of
    copper and tin).
  • Bronze was harder and stronger. Led to Bronze Age in 3000
    BC


Development
of Agriculture                                                14
1. What new tools and technologies did early humans
   develop during the New Stone Age?
2. How did early agriculture develop and spread?
3. In what ways did the development of agriculture change
   Stone Age Society?




READING CHECK!                                         15
Section 3
Foundations of
Civilization
Chapter 1 The Beginnings of Civilization
Prehistory to 1000 BC
                                           16
• Development of irrigation led to farming more land and
  producing surpluses of food to support large populations
  and trade
• Less people needed to farm created other jobs in the
  village like weavers, potters, and religious leaders –
  division of labor
• Leaders began to make
  decisions for the village




From Villages to Cities                                      17
CHARACTERISTICS OF
  CITIES
• Larger and more populated
  than villages
• Diverse people
• Formal organization (city
  centers, government buildings,
  boundaries/walls)
• Centers of trade



From Villages to Cities            18
•    Civilizations formed from early
     cities usually near fertile river
     valleys. Examples:
    • Ur and Uruk near Tigris and
        Euphrates rivers, Middle East
    • Memphis on the Nile River,
        Africa
    • Mohenjo Daro on the Indus
        River, India
    • Anyang near the Huange He
        (Yellow River), China


The First Civilizations                  19
• Civilizations had:
  1. Developed cities
  2. Organized government (decision making and building
     projects)
  3. Formalized religion (ceremonies and rituals)
  4. Division of labor
  5. Social classes (based on occupation, wealth, and
     influence)
  6. Record keeping and writing (track history, calendars)
  7. Art and architecture (symbols of power and ruler’s
     prestige)


The First Civilizations                                  20
• Environmental influences (floods,
  droughts, storms, etc.) led to expansion
  in trade to get scarce resources
• Cultural diffusion – spread of ideas,
  beliefs, customs, and technology from
  one people to anther because of :
  • Trade
  • Migration
  • Conquest
• Competition for resources led to war and
  conflict. Nomads became skilled
  warriors to protect their herds

Change in Civilizations                      21
1. Why did some early villages develop into cities?
2. What characterized the world’s first civilizations and
   where did they develop?
3. What factors cause civilizations to change over time?




READING CHECK!                                              22
• Which                     1.Developed cities
  characteristics of
                            2.Organized
  civilizations do you        government
  predict were most
                            3.Formalized religion
  beneficial in helping
                            4.Division of labor
  the first civilizations
  grow and endure?          5.Social classes
                            6.Record keeping and
                              writing
                            7.Art and architecture


Quick-Write                                          23

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Ch. 1 beginnings of civilizations

  • 1. Section 1 The First People Chapter 1 The Beginnings of Civilization Prehistory to 1000 BC 1
  • 2. Anthropologists • Anthropologists study culture and artifacts Archaeologists New findings are Excavate sites to Studies human constantly revising find objects that material remains our knowledge of will give them clues history Studying the Distant Past 2
  • 3. • Key Discoveries • Mary Leakey finds “Nutcracker Skull” in East Africa. 1.75 million years old. • Donald Johanson found partial skeleton called Lucy in Ethiopia. • ML finds footprints in Tanzania - oldest evidence of hominids walking upright. 3.5 million years old • 2001 skull resembling both Australopithicine and chimpanzee found in Central Africa. 6-7 million years old • Walking upright = free to use hands for handling tools Human Origins 3
  • 4. • Modern Humans • Everyone today is a Homo sapien, means “wise man.” Had larger brains than earlier species • Developed sophisticated tools, shelter, and learned to use fire • May be the first with spoken language because of increased brain function • Cooperate • Hunt in groups • Resolve issues • Form stronger relationships and interact with others Human Origins 4
  • 5. • Early humans began to move because of the change in climate. • 1.6 million years ago, earth cycled between cold and warm periods revealing new areas of land. (Ice Age) • Ability to walk upright and control fire enabled migration out of Africa into the other continents. By 9000 BC humans spread to all but Antarctica Spreading Around the World 5
  • 6. • Adaptation to new environments causes genetic variety • One view – two groups of modern humans • Neanderthals (200,000-30,000 years ago). Died out. May not have been homo sapiens • Cro-Magnons (40,000 years ago). Sturdy and muscular, looked like humans today. Made tools, and had better hunting and survival skills Spreading Around the World 6
  • 7. • First humans lived in the Paleolithic Era, the early part of the Stone Age – people made tools from stone (2.5 million to 10,000 years ago) • People were nomadic, hunted and gathered food, and men and women were equal • Later learned to work with wood and bone. Led to better tools which improved hunting • Other tools: • string from plant fiber = net for fish and small animals • Bow and arrow, bone hooks, fishing spears • Canoe for travel • Needle from bone = animal skin clothing, shoes, hats, carrying sacks Life in the Stone Age 7
  • 8. • Began to form societies of shared cultures, which included language, art, and spiritual beliefs • Cro-Magnons and other Stone Age people produced a variety of art from coal, clay, and iron • Scholars unsure about meaning of art. Anthropologists think they practiced animism, belief that all things in nature have spirits. Life in the Stone Age 8
  • 9. 1. What methods are used to study the distant past? 2. What does evidence suggest about human origins? 3. How did early people spread around the world? 4. How did early people adapt to life in the Stone Age? READING CHECK! 9
  • 10. Section 2 The Beginning of Agriculture Chapter 1 The Beginnings of Civilization Prehistory to 1000 BC 10
  • 11. • New tools that were polished and grinded instead of chipped led to Neolithic Era – New Stone Age • 10,000 years ago, people learned to farm. Turning point because it changed the way people lived. • Plants – learned to grow the best seeds and domesticated wild plants to produce larger food supplies Development of Agriculture 11
  • 12. • Domesticated animals led to larger and more reliable food supply • Dogs among the first. Used for hunting and guarding • Cattle, goats, pigs, and sheep used for meat, milk, and clothing • Large animals used for pulling heavy loads and farming • The development of agriculture and domestication of animals happened independently around the world at different times. It spread slowly through trade and travel. Development of Agriculture 12
  • 13. • By 6000 BC, early farming led to growth of villages and cities as more people settled together. Led to: • Job specialization – people performing different tasks in the group • Extra food for trade • Differences in social status because of wealth and influence • Religion • War with other societies for more land and resources • Spread of diseases like flu, measles, and smallpox Agriculture Changes Society 13
  • 14. • New technologies • Use of animals and new tools led to better farming and food preparation techniques (like pottery for cooking and storing food) • Learned to spin yarn from wool of goats and sheep to make blankets and clothes • Learned to use metal, first copper then bronze (a mix of copper and tin). • Bronze was harder and stronger. Led to Bronze Age in 3000 BC Development of Agriculture 14
  • 15. 1. What new tools and technologies did early humans develop during the New Stone Age? 2. How did early agriculture develop and spread? 3. In what ways did the development of agriculture change Stone Age Society? READING CHECK! 15
  • 16. Section 3 Foundations of Civilization Chapter 1 The Beginnings of Civilization Prehistory to 1000 BC 16
  • 17. • Development of irrigation led to farming more land and producing surpluses of food to support large populations and trade • Less people needed to farm created other jobs in the village like weavers, potters, and religious leaders – division of labor • Leaders began to make decisions for the village From Villages to Cities 17
  • 18. CHARACTERISTICS OF CITIES • Larger and more populated than villages • Diverse people • Formal organization (city centers, government buildings, boundaries/walls) • Centers of trade From Villages to Cities 18
  • 19. Civilizations formed from early cities usually near fertile river valleys. Examples: • Ur and Uruk near Tigris and Euphrates rivers, Middle East • Memphis on the Nile River, Africa • Mohenjo Daro on the Indus River, India • Anyang near the Huange He (Yellow River), China The First Civilizations 19
  • 20. • Civilizations had: 1. Developed cities 2. Organized government (decision making and building projects) 3. Formalized religion (ceremonies and rituals) 4. Division of labor 5. Social classes (based on occupation, wealth, and influence) 6. Record keeping and writing (track history, calendars) 7. Art and architecture (symbols of power and ruler’s prestige) The First Civilizations 20
  • 21. • Environmental influences (floods, droughts, storms, etc.) led to expansion in trade to get scarce resources • Cultural diffusion – spread of ideas, beliefs, customs, and technology from one people to anther because of : • Trade • Migration • Conquest • Competition for resources led to war and conflict. Nomads became skilled warriors to protect their herds Change in Civilizations 21
  • 22. 1. Why did some early villages develop into cities? 2. What characterized the world’s first civilizations and where did they develop? 3. What factors cause civilizations to change over time? READING CHECK! 22
  • 23. • Which 1.Developed cities characteristics of 2.Organized civilizations do you government predict were most 3.Formalized religion beneficial in helping 4.Division of labor the first civilizations grow and endure? 5.Social classes 6.Record keeping and writing 7.Art and architecture Quick-Write 23