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Chapter One: First Peoples Populating the Planet Populating the Planet to 10,000 BCE to 10,000 BCE pages 10-32 pages 10-32
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Page 1: Ch. 1 first peoples DROB81

Chapter One: First PeoplesPopulating the PlanetPopulating the Planet

to 10,000 BCEto 10,000 BCEpages 10-32pages 10-32

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Where were the first people?

• Africa 250,000 years agoAfrica 250,000 years ago• Asia 70,000 years agoAsia 70,000 years ago• Australia 60,000-40,000 years agoAustralia 60,000-40,000 years ago• Europe 45,000 years agoEurope 45,000 years ago• Americas 30,000-15,000 years agoAmericas 30,000-15,000 years ago

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What factors could influence migration patterns and timing?

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Last Ice Age110,000-12,000 years ago (peak 20,000 ya)

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What effect could the ice age have had on migration patterns?

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People have to eat

GatheringHuntingFishing

Scavenging

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Paleolithic Technology

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Bow and Arrow

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Spear and Atlatl

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Fishing hooks and nets

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Clothing (bone needles, weaving), Jewelry, Pottery, Baskets

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Burial sites

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Into Eurasia

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• Middle East (100,000 ya) to Europe (45,000 ya)

–Similarities across long distances. What does that mean?

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Into Australia 60,000-40,000 ya• From Indonesia, From Indonesia, 11stst use of boats use of boats• By 1788 ~300,000 people w/250 languagesBy 1788 ~300,000 people w/250 languages

–Separate, but loosely connectedSeparate, but loosely connected

• Hunting/Gathering/Simple Hunting/Gathering/Simple technology persisted until modern technology persisted until modern timestimes

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Aboriginal Dreamtime

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Into the AmericasBering Strait Land Bridges 30,000-15,000 ya

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Clovis Culture• “Clovis point” projectile across

North America–Disappeared after large animal

extinctions (ex. mammoths)– Why did many species of large animals go

extinct?

• After extinction regional diversification

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Into the Pacific 3,500-1,000 ya• Last phaseLast phase• Intentional colonizationIntentional colonization

–Transported plants and animalsTransported plants and animals–Profound environmental impactsProfound environmental impacts

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The First Human Societies• Small groups

– 20-25 organized by kinship– As low as 10,000 total– Life expectancy ~35 years old

• Egalitarian but with structure• Worked less hours than

agricultural societies

• Environment Impacts

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Religion and Spirituality• Ceremonial spaces,

but no clear evidence of specifics–Mono and polytheism

• Cyclical view of time–Female/life giver

• Venus Figurines

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Settling Down: The Great TransitionEurasia after 25,000 ya

• Tools perfected (micro-blades)• Collection of wild grains• Ice Age ended (16-10,000 ya)• More permanent settlements• Domestication of the dog• What is the next step?

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Göbekli Tepe in Turkey 11,600 yalimestone temple built by hunter gathers

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Comparing Paleolithic Societies

• The San of Southern Africa (Ju/’hoansi)

• The

Chumash of Southern California

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San Chumash

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Big Question 1What is the significance of the

Paleolithic era in world history?

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Big Picture Question 2In what ways did various Paleolithic

societies differ from one another, and how did they change over time?

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Big Question 3Which statements in this chapter seem to be reliable and solidly based on facts, and which

ones are more speculative and uncertain?

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Big Question 4How might our attitudes toward the

modern world influence our assessment of Paleolithic societies?