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In the Beginning Thematic Overview of Pre-History

In the Beginning

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In the Beginning. Thematic Overview of Pre-History. Time Line- How Old?. Modern History- Do the math. Key terms. Geologic time Biological balance Pre-human evolution Language and human evolution Race and history Sexual division of labor Pre-historic spirituality – evidence? Tools - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: In the Beginning

In the BeginningThematic Overview of Pre-History

Page 2: In the Beginning

Time Line- How Old?

Page 3: In the Beginning

Modern History- Do the math

Page 4: In the Beginning

Key termsGeologic timeBiological balancePre-human evolutionLanguage and human evolutionRace and historySexual division of laborPre-historic spirituality – evidence?Tools Hunter-gatherersFarming and human evolution. – types and consequences3 problems

Page 5: In the Beginning

Prehistoric Humans

Page 6: In the Beginning

Transition….

Page 7: In the Beginning

How we changedPre-human communities presumably

evolved biologically changes in genes were more important than

changes in learned behaviorno one knows when that changed - when

evolution by learning became more important must have been after language/speech developed.

Page 8: In the Beginning

Beliefs and Ritual?

Page 9: In the Beginning

BeliefsAncient hunters believed

that world full of spirits.Most impressive

prehistoric evidence – famous cave paintingsWhy paint?

Can only guess but everywhere humans felt a sense of mystery ?

Page 10: In the Beginning

Hunter-Gathers = 99% of our History Implications for our “human nature”? Recent discovery: After decades of digging, paleoanthropologists

established a reasonably clear picture: Modern humans arose in Africa some 200,000 years ago, and all archaic species of humans then disappeared, surviving only outside Africa, as did the Neanderthals (right) in Europe. But geneticists now say a cousin of the Neanderthals may have lingered in Africa until perhaps 25,000 years ago, coexisting with the modern humans and on occasion interbreeding with them

Page 11: In the Beginning

We start farming8,000 years agoOther consequences for humans?The first farmers were less healthy than

the hunter-gatherers had beenTheir shorter stature and they had more

skeletal wear and tear from the hard work,

their teeth rotted more, they were short of protein and vitamins they caught diseases from

domesticated animals: measles from cattle, flu from ducks, plague from rats worms from using their own excrement

as fertilizer.They also got a bad attack of inequality

for the first time. http://www.economist.com/node/10278703

Page 12: In the Beginning

Spread of Farming

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Page 14: In the Beginning

The situation in the southern Levant, along the Jordan valley (and perhaps on the Euphrates bend), can be described as cultivation-dependent sedentism in oasis-like locations, where varieties of floodwater farming could be practiced. It is hypothesized that this obligate dependence on cultivated carbohydrates gave rise to a feedback loop linking population growth and an increasing scale of cultivation, generating a moving demographic front which began the process of spatial expansion.

Page 15: In the Beginning

Çatal Hüyük, a Neolithic settlement in modern Turkey, contained the oldest map yet discovered (6,200 B.C.E.). Above the settlement towered a volcano, Hassan Dag, and from its slopes the villagers quarried obsidian, which they shaped into tools and ornaments for trade. Also, the nutrient-rich terraces at the base of the volcano would have been highly productive for primitive farmers. This artist's conception of Çatal Hüyük, prepared from the map and archeological finds, depicts the village as it may have been in 6,200 B.C.E. Individual homes were entered via ladders from the roofs. Many of the rooms in the village seem to have been used for ceremonial or religious purposes (perhaps not surprising when one realizes that these people lived at the base of an active volcano!), and the settlement's dead were buried beneath the floors of their homes, perhaps as a form of ancestor worship.

1,500 B.C.E.

Page 16: In the Beginning

Problems Relations with huntersTelling time Shortage of suitable land