How to Troubleshoot Apps for the Modern Connected Worker
Notes in Philippine History (Chapter 3)
1.
2. Paleolithic hunters may have followed the herds of wild animal across these land bridges to the Philippine Islands.
3. Austro-Melanesian people who are distinctively small with dark skin and curly brown hair were believed by some western historians as the aborigines of the Philippines.
4. The Mainland Origin Hypothesis by Peter Bellwood and K.C. Chang maintains that the early inhabitants originated from South China and Taiwan.
5. The Island Origin Hypothesis by Wilhelm Solheim II on the other hand believes that the prehistoric people originated and dispersed from an island in Southeast Asia.
6. Culture may be associated with manufactured materials, for these are products of human behavior.
7. The Old Stone Age or Paleolithic Period is the ear of crude stone tools and weapons.
13. The discovery of fire made a great impact in the lifestyle of people.
14. People were able to grill and boil food, practice slash-and-burn (kaingin), and pottery and jar making through the process of kilning.
15. Jars are also used as burial coffins as evidenced by the Manunggul jar of Palawan.
16. Other jar and potteries include palayok, banga, and tapayan.
17. Metal Age refers to the time in the development of human culture where tools and weapons were made of metal, which gradually replaced stone tools.
18. The use of jewelry as an ancient art began in this period.
19. Industries like metal working, pottery making, glassmaking, and tie-and-dye weaving.
20. The Age of Contact is the period of trading relations with neighboring islands, mostly by Asian traders.
21. The common sharing of culture like religion and writing was facilitated by intensive internal trade, principally between riverine and coastal communities.