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Fossil Finds Vocab Words Archaeologists locate and study things left behind by people. Paleoanthropologists study ancestors of modern people Fossils are remains of once living things Excavate means to uncover things digging Bullet Notes In 1896 a Dutch Surgeon named Eugene Dubois uncovered what he believed
to be the remains of an ancestor and he named it Homo erectus Louis Leaky found what he thought was a direct ancestor of modern humans
that he named Homo habilis Richard Leaky in 1974 discovered Lucy which is now a famous half skeleton In 1994 a University of California scientist named Tim White found an African
hominid that could of walked on the earth up to 4.5 million years ago.
•. Homo sapiens means wise humans•Homo erectus died out but homo sapiens continued to live all humans are home sapiens•Homo sapiens lived in bands of 20•Their goal in life was to live they used every part of the animal•.hunters and gathers were nomads
HUNTERS AND GATHERERS
• Artifacts- a human made object especially from long ago
• Radiocarbon dating-tells how much carbon remains in a people, animal or plant
• Extinct- no longer existing • Migration- movement from one place to
another• Consequence- effect
Vocabulary
• First homo sapiens fossil found with head arm and leg bones
• It was found in Germany
Neanderthals
Pages 60-61 summary
•Talks about early cultures and societies.
•Each culture lived in different conditions and situations.
•Language helped early people join together into groups
•Different cultures came up with different solutions.
•Early people hunted and gathered food.
Pages 60-61 vocabulary
Culture- A way of life
Society- An organized group of people living and working under a set of rules and traditions.
Neanderthals
By Sean Fisher Neanderthals are early humans, or Homo Sapiens. The first Neanderthal skeleton discovered was in 1856, in a cave in the Neander Valley. Neanderthals are not our direct ancestors.
Picture from Google Images, info from Harcourt Horizons Ancient Civilizations.
Hello, Everybody!
Early Ancestors
The first hominids appeared in South Africa around 3 million years ago. Many plant eaters were in eastern Africa and then , 2.5 million years ago, another group of hominids appeared in East Africa called Homo Habalis. Within 500,000 years they spread out through Africa in the east and south. They traveled in search of food by going through large grasslands. They used stone choppers and knifes. Then, 1.9 million years ago, Homo Erectus spread out, smarter then the other humans. They also survived by hunting and gathering. They eventually led bands across the Sahara and into Asia. They then appeared in Asia to.
By Tori Helton Hannah Wilson and Elaine Schutte
Bands- Small groups
Spreading Through the WorldBy Ally Gormley and Sara Ventura
Our section was mainly about how early hunters survived difficulties. They encountered bad weather animal extinction and ice ages. The Ice age lasted from around 115,000 years ago to 10,000 years ago. These early people used tools to help them fight through their difficulties. They had to make their tools by hand . Some of these tools were more difficult to make than others. They mainly used needles which were made from flint. Another thing that helped them through their difficulties was a land bridge that connected Asia and North America. This land bridge allowed early hunters to cross to different land and find new animals to hunt. The people needed to find a new food source due to the extinction of the animals that they hunted in the past. The early hunters finally fought through the tundra, glaciers, extinctions, and even more to eventually form nearly everything that we have today.
Vocabulary Words
• Ice Age- a long period of bitter cold
• Glaciers- huge sheets of ice• Tundra- large treeless found in
Arctic regions
Early Farmers• Once early societies started to develop, they
realized that they could not hunt and gather anymore because it was not bringing in enough food to support their family.
• Instead of collecting food they started to produce their own crops and raising their own livestock.
• They learned that seeds from fully grown plants when planted, grew new plants of that kind.
• In some societies, people came to depend on more small plants grown in their own garden, rather than wild crops.
• Early farming societies decided that they would be better off building small shelters and to grow crops around the small villages.
• Farming started independently at different times.
• From early societies to now, animals have always played a large role in farming.
• Farmers started to depend more on livestock than raising their crops.
• Even some people today rely on hunting and gathering to supply their needs.
Vocab WordsDomesticate - to domesticate means to
tame living things for people’s useEconomy - the way people use resources to
meet their needsLivestock - to domesticate animals such as
cattle, pigs and sheepNomad - people with no settled home or
shelter
Diversity in Early Agriculture
• Agriculture in Southwestern Asia was based on wheat and barley and raising sheep, goats, and cattle.
• Northern Africa farmers raised wheat, barley, cattle, pigs, sheep, and goats.
• People in Pakistan and China raised rice, millet, pigs, chickens, and water buffalos.
Mountain valleys in Peru farmers grew chili peppers and beans.In Bolivia potatoes were a major crop, later Native Americans grew corn which would be important throughout American history. VocabularyMaize- cornSubsist- survive
Early Farming AreasTigris-Euphrates valley 10,000 years
ago they farmed barley, wheat, goats, and sheep. Andean 9,800 years ago they farmed beans, chili peppers,
alpacas, and llamas. Haung He Valley 8,000 years ago they farmed millet, chicken, and pigs. Indus Valley 8,000
years ago farmed barley, wheat, cattle, goats, and sheep. Nile Valley 8,000
years ago farmed barley, wheat, cattle, goats, and sheep. Middle America 5,400
years ago they farmed beans chili peppers, maize, and turkeys.
Justin Katt
10hop
11-11-2009
Effects of ChangeAgriculture, the raising of domesticated
plants and animals changed human societies forever. Agriculture provided a
reliable food sources. It provided farmers to grow more crops then they
needed. As early people turned to agriculture the size of there
communities began to grow. With more food available more people could live
in one place.
Migration
• Early migration started about 100k years ago in the middle of Africa then went into Europe, Asia, and Australia. Then, it crossed the ice bridge into America and went down to the lower tip of South America. It ended about 12k years ago.
Tool Making
• Needles were made by cutting a thin triangle out of an antler, poking a hole in the thickest end, then rubbing it against sandstone to sharpen it. The cutting was done with a sharp flint tool.