world history chapter one the first humans (prehistory - 3500 b.c.)

92

Upload: angelica-atkinson

Post on 20-Jan-2016

227 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)
Page 2: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

World HistoryChapter One

The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

Page 3: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

The Impact Today•Scientists continue to search for the

remains of early humans, and their discoveries are changing the way we view the first humans.

•Paleolithic peoples used technological inventions to change their physical environment, just as humans do today.

Page 4: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

Objectives• 1. Explain the methods scientists use to

uncover early human existence• 2. Describe the nature of human life

during the Old Stone Age• 3. Identify the important developments

of the New Stone Age• 4. Define civilization & identify the

characteristics of a civilization

Page 5: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

A Story That Matters

•Louis B. Leakey & his wife Mary Nicol Leakey discovered the world’s earliest known human bones in the Olduvai Gorge in East Africa

Page 6: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

Mary Leakey

Louis Leakey

Page 7: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

Section OneEarly Humans

Page 8: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

I. Before History

•Prehistory – the period before writing was developed (p. 19)

Page 9: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)
Page 10: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

A. Archaeology & Anthropology

•Archaeology – the study of past societies through an analysis of the items people left behind them

•Artifacts – tools, pottery, paintings, weapons, buildings & household items left behind by early people (p.20)

Page 11: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)
Page 12: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

A. Archaeology & Anthropology

•Anthropology – the study of human life & culture based on artifacts & human fossils (p.20)

Page 13: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

A. Archaeology & Anthropology

•Fossils – A remnant or impression of an organism from a past geologic age that has been preserved in the earth’s crust (p.20)

Page 14: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

B. Dating Artifacts & Fossils

•Radiocarbon dating measures the amount of C-14 left in an object

Page 15: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)
Page 16: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

B. Dating Artifacts & Fossils

•Thermoluminescence dating measures the light given off by electrons trapped in the soil surrounding fossils & artifacts

•Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)

Page 17: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)
Page 18: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

II. Early Stages of Development

•Understanding still depends on guesswork

•New discoveries

Page 19: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

A. From Hominids to Homo Sapiens

•1. Australopithecine – “southern apes”, the earliest humanlike creatures that flourished in eastern & southern Africa 3 to 4 million years ago (p.20)

•Discovered by David Johanson

Page 20: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

Australopithecus

First upright hominid

Page 21: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

•Hominids – humans & other humanlike creatures that walk upright (p.21)

•New discoveries, Kenyanthropus

Page 22: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

•2. Homo erectus – “upright human being”, a species that emerged around 1.5 million years ago & marked a second stage of early human development (p.21)

•Learned to use fire to keep warm in colder areas

Page 23: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

•3. Homo sapiens – “wise human being”, a species that emerged around 250,000 years ago & marked a third stage in human development (p.21)

Page 24: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

Two subgroups•a. Neanderthals – type of Homo

sapiens that lived in Europe & the Middle East between 100,000 & 30,000 B.C. (p.21)

•Burial of dead indicates a belief in an afterlife

•Made cloths from the skins of animals

Page 25: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

Homo Erectus

Neanderthal

Homo Sapiens

Page 26: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

•b. Homo sapiens sapiens – “wise, wise human being”, a species that appeared in Africa between 150,000 & 200,000 years ago; they were the first anatomically modern humans (p.22)

•People who looked like us

Page 27: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

B. The Spread of Homo Sapiens Sapiens

•Moved beyond their old hunting grounds at a rate of only 2 to 3 miles per generation

•In search of food

Page 28: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)
Page 29: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)
Page 30: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

The Human Race

Page 31: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

III. The Hunter-Gathers of the Old Stone Age

•Paleolithic Age – from the Greek for “Old Stone”, the early period of human history, from approximately 2.5 million to 10,000 B.C., during which humans used simple stone tools; sometimes called the Old Stone Age (p.22)

Page 32: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

A. The Paleolithic Way of Life

•Gathered wild nuts, berries, fruits, wild grains & green plants

•Hunted buffalo, horses, bison & reindeer

Page 33: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

•Developed better tools•Spear, bow & arrow, harpoons & fishhooks

Page 34: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)
Page 35: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

A and CB and D

A

Page 36: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

Tools

The word technology refers to the ability of human beings to make things that sustain them and give them some control over their environment. The technology available at the beginning of human history was quite simple. It consisted primarily of the ability to make stone tools.

Read the excerpt on page 23 of your textbook and answer the questions on the following slides.

Page 37: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

•Nomads – a person who moves from place to place (p23)

•Followed animal migrations & vegetation cycles

•Lived in small groups of 20 to 30•Group effort

Page 38: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

B. The Roles of Men & Women

•Women - Bore & raised children•Gathered berries, nuts & grains•Men - Did most of the hunting of large animals

Page 39: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

C. Adapting to Survive•Paleolithic peoples, found shelter in

caves•Over time, created new types of

shelters•Wood poles or sticks covered with

animal hides•Bones of large animals to build frames

Page 40: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)
Page 41: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

D. The Use of Fire•Homo erectus first learned to make fires deliberately

•Gave warmth & fostered a sense of community

•Scared away animals

Page 42: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

D. The Use of Fire•Flush animals out of wooded areas or caves

•Food could be cooked making it taste better, last longer & easier to chew & digest

Page 43: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

•Started fires based on friction

•Later stone (iron pyrites)

Page 44: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

•Reminds us that early humans sometimes adapted not by changing themselves to better fit their environment but by changing the environment

Page 45: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

E. The Ice Ages

•Most recent began about 10,000 B.C. & ended about 8000 B.C.

•Thick ice covered large parts of Europe, Asia & North America

Page 46: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

F. Creating Art•Existed even in prehistory•Cave paintings of large animals found

at Lascaux, in southwestern France•Painted lions, oxen, owls, panthers•Done between 25,000 & 12,000 B.C.

Page 47: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)
Page 48: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)
Page 49: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)
Page 50: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)
Page 51: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

•Used stone lamps filled with animal fat

•Crushed mineral ores & combined them with animal fat

•Red, yellow & black

Page 52: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

•Used fingertips, crushed twigs, & even brushes made from animal hairs

•Hollow reeds to blow thin lines

Page 53: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

•Show animals in remarkably realistic forms

•Few humans appear (sticklike figures)

•Painted as part of a magical or religious ritual intended to ensure success in hunting

Page 54: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

Section Two: The Neolithic Revolution & The

Rise of Civilization

Page 55: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

•Cities emerged in the river valleys of Mesopotamia, Egypt, India & China giving rise to civilizations

Page 56: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

I. The Neolithic Revolution•Neolithic Revolution – the shift from hunting of animals & gathering of food to the keeping of animals & the growing of food on a regular basis that occurred around 8,000 B.C. (p.27)“New Stone Age”

Page 57: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

•Shift from the hunting of animals & the gathering of food to systematic agriculture

•Systematic agriculture – the keeping of animals & the growing of food on a regular basis (p.28)

Page 58: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

•Domestication – adaptation for human use (p.28)

•Animals also used to do work•Agricultural revolution

Page 59: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

•The ability to acquire food on a regular basis gave humans greater control over their environment

•Gave up their nomadic ways of life & began to live in settled communities

Page 60: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

A. The Growing of Crops

•Between 8000 & 5000 B.C.•Different areas throughout the world

•By 5000 B.C., rice was being grown in Southeast Asia

Page 61: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)
Page 62: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

•In the Western Hemisphere, Mesoamericans, inhabitants of present-day Mexico & Central America grew beans, squash, & maize (corn) between 7000 & 5000 B.C.

The Growing of Crops

Page 63: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

B. Neolithic Farming Villages

•Growing of crops gave rise to more permanent settlements

•Oldest & biggest were in Southwest Asia

•Jericho, in Palestine near the Dead Sea, was in existence by 8000 B.C.

Page 64: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

•Catal Huyuk, located in modern-day Turkey, high point from 6700 to 5700 B.C.

•Mud brick houses

Neolithic Farming Villages

Page 65: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

Neolithic Village

Page 66: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

no ground level entrances

climb the ladder to the rooftop, and then enter through the entrance on the roof

for protection from enemies

Page 67: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

•Food surpluses made it possible for people to do things other than farming

•Artisans – a skilled craftsperson who makes products such as weapons & jewelry (p.29)

Neolithic Farming Villages

Page 68: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

•Special buildings•Shrines & statues•“earth mothers”

http://www.vroma.org/images/mcmanus_images/primordial2.gif

Page 69: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

C. Consequences of the Neolithic Revolution

•Led to further changes•Need to build houses for protection

•Structures for storage of goods

Page 70: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

•Encourage the development of trade

•People began to specialize in certain crafts, & a division of labor developed

•Stone tools became more refined

Consequences of the Neolithic Revolution

Page 71: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

D. Relationship between men & women

•Men became more active in farming & herding animals

• Jobs that took them away from the home settlement

•Obtaining food & protecting the settlement

•More dominant role

Page 72: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

•Women remained behind, caring for children

•Weaving cloth, turning milk into cheese

•Tasks that require much labor in one place

Relationship between men & women

Page 73: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

E. The End of the Neolithic Age

•Between 4000 & 3000 B.C.•The use of metals marked a new level of human control over the environment & its resources

Page 74: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

End of the Neolithic Age

•Copper was the first metal to be used in making tools

•Combination of copper & tin created bronze

Page 75: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

BronzeAgeSickle

Neolithic Toolsand Pottery

Bronzesickle

Page 76: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

End of the Neolithic Age

•Bronze Age – the period from around 3,000 to 1,200 B.C. characterized by the widespread use of bronze for tools & weapons (p.30)

Page 77: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

Bronze Sword

Page 78: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

End of the Neolithic Age•More than villages (cities)•Mastered the art of farming•Developed more complex societies

•Created armies & built walled cities

Page 79: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

II. The Emergence of Civilization

•Culture – the way of life a people follow (p.30)

•Civilization – a complex culture in which large numbers of people share a number of common elements such as social structure, religion & art (p.30)

Page 80: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

Six basic characteristics of civilizations

•1. Cities•2. Government•3. Religion•4. Social structure•5. Art•6. Writing

Page 81: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

A. The Rise of Cities

•Developed in river valleys

•Large-scale farming

Page 82: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)
Page 83: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

B. The Growth of Governments

•Organize & regulate human activity

•Need to maintain the food supply, & to build walls for defense

•Provide for smooth interaction between individuals & groups

Page 84: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

B. The Growth of Governments

•In the first civilizations, governments were monarchs – king or queen who rule a kingdom (p.30)

•Organized armies to protect their populations & made laws

Page 85: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

C. The Role of Religion

•Explain the working of the forces of nature & the fact of their own existence

•Gods & goddesses were crucial to a community’s success

Page 86: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

The Role of Religion•To win favor, priests supervised rituals aimed at pleasing them (Gods & goddesses)

•This gave the priests special power & made them very important people

Page 87: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

D. A New Social Structure

•1. Rulers & an upper class of priests, government officials & warriors

•2. Free people – farmers, artisans & craftspeople

•3. Slaves

Page 88: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

E. The Use of Writing

•To keep accurate records

•Creative expression

Page 89: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

F. Artistic Activity

•Temples & pyramids•Places of worship or sacrifice or for burial

•Paintings & sculpture

Page 90: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

Chapter Summary

Page 91: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)

Understanding Map ProjectionsThe map below is a Cylindrical

Projection (Mercator). Imagine wrapping a paper cylinder around the globe. A light from within the globe projects its surface onto the paper. The resulting conformal projection makes Alaska appear larger than

Mexico. Distortion is greatest near the North and South Poles.

Page 92: World History Chapter One The First Humans (Prehistory - 3500 B.C.)