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The Agricultural Revolution Chapter 3, Lesson 2
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The Agricultural Revolution Chapter 3, Lesson 2. Neolithic Times ► Earliest people were nomads. People who moved from one place to another. ► After.

Dec 23, 2015

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Page 1: The Agricultural Revolution Chapter 3, Lesson 2. Neolithic Times ► Earliest people were nomads.  People who moved from one place to another. ► After.

The Agricultural Revolution

Chapter 3, Lesson 2

Page 2: The Agricultural Revolution Chapter 3, Lesson 2. Neolithic Times ► Earliest people were nomads.  People who moved from one place to another. ► After.

Neolithic Times

►Earliest people were nomads. People who moved from one place to

another.►After the Earth temperature rose,

many nomads moved to mild climate and fertile lands.

►A new revolution occurred as people stayed in one location and grew grains and vegetables.

Page 3: The Agricultural Revolution Chapter 3, Lesson 2. Neolithic Times ► Earliest people were nomads.  People who moved from one place to another. ► After.

Neolithic Times

►Farming replaced hunting as the main source of food; Along side this people began domesticating animals. Taming animals to be used by humans.

►Animals could be used for transporting goods, provided meat, milk, and wool.

Page 4: The Agricultural Revolution Chapter 3, Lesson 2. Neolithic Times ► Earliest people were nomads.  People who moved from one place to another. ► After.

The Neolithic Age

►Neolithic Age was the latest period of the stone age. Began around 8,000 B.C. and lasted around

4,000 B.C.►Neolithic is a Greek word for “New Stone.”

The name is misleading because although new stone tools were made, the age is most known for it’s shift from hunting and gathering to systematic agriculture.

Growing food on a regular basis.

Page 5: The Agricultural Revolution Chapter 3, Lesson 2. Neolithic Times ► Earliest people were nomads.  People who moved from one place to another. ► After.

The Neolithic Age

►This change did not occur quickly and people were still hunting through the Mesolithic, or middle stone age.

Page 6: The Agricultural Revolution Chapter 3, Lesson 2. Neolithic Times ► Earliest people were nomads.  People who moved from one place to another. ► After.

Big Changes for Humankind

►The Neolithic Age is also known as the Agricultural Revolution. A revolution is a change that has a big effect on

people’s lives.►Because people had a constant food supply,

populations began to grow at a faster rate. Also, people began to give up their nomadic ways.

►The agricultural revolution is sometimes considered the most important event in human history.

Page 7: The Agricultural Revolution Chapter 3, Lesson 2. Neolithic Times ► Earliest people were nomads.  People who moved from one place to another. ► After.

Widespread Farming

►By 8,000 B.C. Southwest Asia was growing wheat and barley. They had also domesticated pigs, cows, goats and sheep.

►Farming than spread into Southeastern Europe.

►By, 4000 B.C. farming was established as an economic activity.

Page 8: The Agricultural Revolution Chapter 3, Lesson 2. Neolithic Times ► Earliest people were nomads.  People who moved from one place to another. ► After.

Widespread Farming

►At around 6,000 B.C. the Nile Valley was growing wheat and barley. Farming will spread along the Nile.

► In Central Africa certain types of crops emerged. These were root crops called tubers, which

included yams. Also grew fruits like bananas.►Wheat and barley farming would move

eastward to India between 8000 and 5000 B.C.

Page 9: The Agricultural Revolution Chapter 3, Lesson 2. Neolithic Times ► Earliest people were nomads.  People who moved from one place to another. ► After.

Widespread Farming

►By 6000 B.C. northern China had millet (a food grain) and had domesticated dogs and pigs.

►By 5000 B.C. farmers in Southeast Asia were growing rice.

►Rice farming would spread into southern China.► In the Western Hemisphere, between 7000 and

5000 B.C. people in Central America and Mexico were growing corn, squash, and potatoes. Also domesticated chickens and dogs.

Page 10: The Agricultural Revolution Chapter 3, Lesson 2. Neolithic Times ► Earliest people were nomads.  People who moved from one place to another. ► After.

Life in the Neolithic Age

►People would settle near fields so they could plant, grow, and harvest crops more efficiently.

►People also settled near water sources, especially rivers.

Page 11: The Agricultural Revolution Chapter 3, Lesson 2. Neolithic Times ► Earliest people were nomads.  People who moved from one place to another. ► After.

Neolithic Communities

►Neolithic farming villages were found throughout Europe, India, Egypt, China and Mexico.

► Jericho was one of the biggest communities and was located in an area between present-day Israel and Jordan called the West Bank.

►Was well established by 8000 B.C. and extended across several acres. They were surrounded by walls that were several

feet thick.

Page 12: The Agricultural Revolution Chapter 3, Lesson 2. Neolithic Times ► Earliest people were nomads.  People who moved from one place to another. ► After.

Life in the Neolithic Age

►Another well-known Neolithic Community was Catalhuyuk in Present Day Turkey.

► It was around 6700 and 5700 B.C. The people in this civilization had a population of

about 6,000, and entered their homes from their rooftops. The inside was decorated with wall paintings.

► They also had shrines. These were holy places. It had statues of gods and goddesses. Also had

statues of women giving birth. These are examples of religions growing in the

Neolithic civilizations.

Page 13: The Agricultural Revolution Chapter 3, Lesson 2. Neolithic Times ► Earliest people were nomads.  People who moved from one place to another. ► After.

Life in the Neolithic Age

►Farmers grew fruits, nuts, and different grains on land outside the civilization.

►People grew their own food and kept it in storerooms in their homes.

►They raised sheep, goats and cattle that provided milk and meat.

►They ate fish and and bird eggs from nearby low-lying wetlands called marshes.

►Scenes on a wall also show that they hunted.

Page 14: The Agricultural Revolution Chapter 3, Lesson 2. Neolithic Times ► Earliest people were nomads.  People who moved from one place to another. ► After.

What Were the Benefits of a Settled Life.

►Protection from weather and animals.►Steady Food Supplies.►More people meant more crops.

Excessive food was traded for food they could not get themselves.

►Neolithic people began to take part in economic activities other than farming that suited their talents. This is specialization. Specialization – the act of training for a

particular job.

Page 15: The Agricultural Revolution Chapter 3, Lesson 2. Neolithic Times ► Earliest people were nomads.  People who moved from one place to another. ► After.

What Were the Benefits of a Settled Life.

►Some people artisans, or skilled workers. They made weapons, jewelry, pottery

from clay, and baskets and clothes from plant fibers.

Otzi, the Neolithic Iceman, wore a cape made from woven grass fibers.

►They would trade with others for things they did not have.

Page 16: The Agricultural Revolution Chapter 3, Lesson 2. Neolithic Times ► Earliest people were nomads.  People who moved from one place to another. ► After.

What Were the Benefits of a Settled Life.

►The roles of men and women would also change. Men worked in fields farming and herding

animals. They were also responsible for growing food and protecting the village. They also emerged as family and community leaders.

Women bore children and made cloth from sheep wool and used bone needles to make clothes from animal furs. They also managed the food supply and other tasks.

Page 17: The Agricultural Revolution Chapter 3, Lesson 2. Neolithic Times ► Earliest people were nomads.  People who moved from one place to another. ► After.

What Were the Benefits of a Settled Life.

►The growth of communities did not always bring benefits. Jordan’s rapid population growth resulted

in wood and other supplies to be used up quickly.

This could cause desert like conditions to spread.

Where this type of damaged occurred settlements were abandoned.

Page 18: The Agricultural Revolution Chapter 3, Lesson 2. Neolithic Times ► Earliest people were nomads.  People who moved from one place to another. ► After.

The End of the Neolithic Age

►During the late Neolithic Age, people made more technological advances.

►Toolmakers created better farming tools as the need for them arose. Hoes for digging soil, sickles for cutting grain, and

millstones for grinding flour.►Some people began working with metals

including copper. Experimented with copper to make tools and

weapons. These were easier to make than ones of stone.

Page 19: The Agricultural Revolution Chapter 3, Lesson 2. Neolithic Times ► Earliest people were nomads.  People who moved from one place to another. ► After.

The End of the Neolithic Age

►Craftspeople in Western Asia discovered that mixing copper and tin formed bronze. This was a technological breakthrough because

bronze was stronger than copper.►Bronze became widely used between 3000

and 1200 B.C. ►This period is known as Bronze Age.

The time period when people used bronze.►Few people could afford bronze and continued

to use tools and weapons made of stone.

Page 20: The Agricultural Revolution Chapter 3, Lesson 2. Neolithic Times ► Earliest people were nomads.  People who moved from one place to another. ► After.

Civilizations Emerge

►Civilizations would begin to develop by the beginning of the Bronze Age. A civilization is a complex culture. Civilizations share similar characteristics

►Four of the great river valley civilizations were Mesopotamia, Egypt, India, and China. These would emerge around 3000 B.C.

Page 21: The Agricultural Revolution Chapter 3, Lesson 2. Neolithic Times ► Earliest people were nomads.  People who moved from one place to another. ► After.

Cities and Government

►Civilizations developed cities and governments. The first civilizations developed in river valleys

where fertile land made it easy to grow crops and feed lots of people.

Rivers provided fish and water►They encouraged trade of goods and

ideas.►River valleys would become the centers of

civilizations

Page 22: The Agricultural Revolution Chapter 3, Lesson 2. Neolithic Times ► Earliest people were nomads.  People who moved from one place to another. ► After.

Cities and Government

►Governments were created to protect people and food.

►The first government were monarchies A type of government lead by a king or

queen. They created armies to defend against

enemies and made laws to maintain order. Also appointed officials who managed food

supplies and building projects.

Page 23: The Agricultural Revolution Chapter 3, Lesson 2. Neolithic Times ► Earliest people were nomads.  People who moved from one place to another. ► After.

Religion

►Religions emerged to help people explain their lives. It helped explain forces of nature and the role of humans in the world.

►Early people believed gods were responsible for a groups survival.

►Priests held religious ceremonies to win the support of the gods.

►Rulers claimed their power was based on the approval of the gods.

Page 24: The Agricultural Revolution Chapter 3, Lesson 2. Neolithic Times ► Earliest people were nomads.  People who moved from one place to another. ► After.

Social Structure

►Early Civilizations had Social Class Structure. People in societies were organized into groups. This was determined mostly by money or power. The highest in the chain were usually rulers,

priests, government officials and warriors. They set rules and made important decisions. Below this were free people, including farmers,

artisans, and craftspeople. At the bottom were enslaved people, most of

whom were captured from enemies during wars.

Page 25: The Agricultural Revolution Chapter 3, Lesson 2. Neolithic Times ► Earliest people were nomads.  People who moved from one place to another. ► After.

Writing and Art

►People invented ways of writing to pass information on. They used symbols in place of letters and words. Writing was important because it helped keep

accurate records and to preserve stories. They also created art for enjoyment and practical

purpose. Artists created works about gods and forces of

nature. They also designed massive buildings that served

as places of worship or burial tombs for kings.