The first humans_prehistory_to_3500_bc_v_03

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World History Odyssey Charter School

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First Humans Prehistory to 3500 BC Note version

Transcript of The first humans_prehistory_to_3500_bc_v_03

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World History

Odyssey Charter School

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Archaeology is the study of past societies through an analysis of what people have left behind them. Archaeologists dig up and analyze artifacts.

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Archaeologists are the experts who use these artifacts and the remains of humans – human fossils – to determine how people lived their lives.

Anthropologists often work in conjunction with archaeologists to determine how people lived and what extinct cultures were like.

Modern-day anthropologists also study existing societies, sometimes by immersing themselves in another culture.

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Used by archaeologists to determine the ages of artifacts and fossils. It is a method of analysis that calculates the ages of objects by measuring the amount of C-14 (Carbon) left in an object.

This type of dating is appropriate for objects that are no more than 50,000 years old.

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Dates an object by measuring the light given off by electrons trapped in the soil surrounding fossils and artifacts.

This method of dating objects enables scientists to make relatively precise measurements back to about 200,000 years ago.

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Hominids or Australopithecines are the earliest humanlike creatures that flourished in Africa. They were the first to use simple tools.

They lived 5,000,000 to 1,000,000 years ago.

Areas in Africa where early man has been found.

Australopithecus skull. Note the slope of the face and back of the skull.

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2.5 million years ago, another humanlike being evolved. Called Homo Habilis, these people developed their own tools.

Homo Habilis skull. Note the prominent brow ridges; the skull is not as sloped as Australopithecus.

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According to evolutionary theory, hominids developed into Homo Erectus around 1.5 million years ago. They were the first to leave Africa and spread into Europe and Asia. They were also the first “upright” human being (hence the name “erectus”. They also learned how to use fire, which gave them more control over their lives and environment. The use of fire was important when the Ice Ages began around 100,000 BC and didn’t end until 8,000 BC.

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Green areas represent the spread of Homo Erectus; Red Dots are areas where fossils have been recovered.

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Then, 250,000 years ago, a new species

called Homo Sapiens (wise human beings)

developed.

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Neanderthals were just one type of Homo Sapiens

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The first anatomically modern humans, known as Homo sapiens sapiens, appeared in Africa between 150,000 and 200,000 years ago. Anatomically means they had bodies similar to modern man.

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Humans used simple stone tools and were hunters and gatherers.

Paleolithic Age means “stone age”

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This is the period of the agricultural revolution. Hunting and gathering was replaced by the keeping of animals and growing food on a regular basis.

Fertile Crescent

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The growing of crops on a regular basis made possible the support of larger populations and gave rise to more permanent settlements.

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Neolithic farming villages were the emergence of larger civilizations.

Catal Huyuk, in modern-day Anatolia (Turkey), was one of the first known settlements. From 7,500 B.C., it is a large settlement with individual houses.

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To domesticate something is to tame it, or bring it under human control. This can apply to both plants and animals.

The domestication of plants and animals may have been the single most revolutionary event in human history. Domesticating plants and animals was responsible for an increase in the human life span, the creation of cities…

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…and the formulation of laws and government. It leads to systems of writing, the development of mathematics and science, as well as the establishment of the world’s major religions.

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Once humans began to work cooperatively to grow food, they needed to establish rules for sharing water and dividing crops. They also created a system for establishing and enforcing laws. All of this was the result of the planting of the first seed.

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Be sure to answer all the questions in the lesson!