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Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)
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Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Dec 26, 2015

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Page 1: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Unit 1TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS(8000-600 B.C.E. )

Page 2: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Chapter 1

BIG GEOGRAPHY AND THE PEOPLING OF THE EARTH

Page 3: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

What is B.C.E. and C.E.?

• B.C.E. and C.E. replaced B.C. and A.D.

• B.C. was Before Christ and is now B.C.E or Before Common Era

• A.D. was Anno Domini which is Year of Our Lord in Latin. That has now been changed to C.E. which is Common Era.

Page 4: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Paleolithic Age (2.5 million years ago until 10,000 BCE)Humans traveled in small hunting-gathering groupsMigrated from origins in East Africa to Eurasia, Australia, and the AmericasMobile and adaptive to various climactic and geographical settingsUse of fire: to aid in hunting, protection against predators, and adapt to cold environmentsMostly hunter-gatherers; some groups exchanged people, ideas, food, and goodsCULTURAL DIFFUSION!!!!!!!!!!

Page 5: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Hominids

Earliest Humans

Page 6: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

5 Stages of Hominids – Pre-History• Australopithecus – “southern ape”

• “Lucy” (Johansen) Great Rift Valley – Ethiopia• diggers; lacked language, short, furry, omnivores

• Homo Habilis – “handy man”• Louis and Mary Leakey – Kenya• Used stone tools; lacked complex language

• Homo Erectus – “upright man” - bipedal• Not only in Africa but Asia and Europe• used complex tools and fire; first spoken language

• Homo Sapiens – “wise man”–Neanderthal Man–Lived all over the world, religious rituals, advanced spoken language,

cave painting, sculpting, identified by clans• Homo Sapiens Sapiens – “wise, wise man” – US!

Page 7: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

The Journey of Mankind – The Peopling of the World

Page 9: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Paleolithic

Old Stone Age

Page 10: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Hunters & Gatherers

Page 11: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Stories from the Stone Age

Page 12: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Early Hominid FindsNotice where the homo sapiens were found.

Page 13: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Answer Question – Turn Into Tray

• Based on your reading AND discussion/lecture:

•  What did the human species accomplish during the Paleolithic Age and what is the evidence of these accomplishments?  

• What were the advantages and disadvantages of the species?  

Page 14: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Chapter 2

THE NEOLITHIC REVOLUTION AND THE EARLY AGRICULTURAL

SOCIETIES

Page 15: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Neolithic Agricultural Revolution

9,000 B.C.E.

Page 16: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

  

The Neolithic Revolution and the Birth of Civilization

Homo sapiens emerged in Africa 250,000 years ago100,000 years ago they began to migrate

Page 17: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Neolithic Revolution

Neolithic Revolution began after the last Ice Age (10,000 BCE)Humans began settling and adapting to their environmentsSome remained hunter-gatherersSwitch to agriculture and settling in an area created a more reliable food supply (but not diverse)Begin using domesticated animals for food and for laborSettlements lead to population increaseFood surplus led to specialization of labor (division of labor)

Page 18: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Answer Question – Turn Into Tray

• Based on your reading AND discussion/lecture:

• What technological changes occurred during the Paleolithic and Neolithic Ages?

Page 19: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Surplus

Irrigation Food Surplus Civilization

Page 20: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Chapter 3

THE DEVELOPMENT AND INTERACTIONS OF EARLY

AGRICULTURAL, PASTORAL, AND URBAN SOCIETIES

Page 21: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

City-State

Sumer - 3200 B.C.

Page 22: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Ziggurat

Page 23: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Initial Civilization Centers

Page 24: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Fertile Crescent

Tigris & Euphrates Rivers

Page 25: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Nile River

Page 26: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Eight Components of Civilization:1. Cities

• Agriculture allowed for a surplus (which was difficult to move)

• River valleys: agriculture required a stable source of water

Page 27: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

• Issues laws, collects taxes, organizes defense, monitors/rations food supply

• Bureaucracy – managing government through departments of officials

• Protecting the surplus was of the utmost importance

2. Government

Page 28: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Code of Hammurabi

1790 B.C.

Page 29: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

•People believed in higher beings

•Polytheistic – many gods

•People wanted to gain favor with the gods

3. Religion

Page 30: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Wisdom Literature

Hymns and prayers to gods, proverbs, accounts of battles

Page 31: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Monotheistic

One God

Page 32: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Prophet

Page 33: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Israelites

Covenant with God

Page 34: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Abraham:Root of Judaism, Christianity and Islam

Page 35: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

• Crucial skill for early civilizations

• Pictograms – simple drawings to show words

• Scribes – as writing became complex these trained experts learned to read and write

4. Writing

Page 36: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Cuneiform

First Written Language

Page 37: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Hieroglyphics

Page 38: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Rosetta StoneAdvanced the modern understanding of hieroglyphic writing

Page 39: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

• People were ranked according to their jobs/occupations

• Priests and nobles were at the top level of society

• Next, came merchants, artisans, peasant farmers, and finally…..slaves.

5. Social Classes

Page 40: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

• Monumental architecture – temples, palaces

• Irrigation systems, roads and bridges

• Defensive walls

6. Public Works

Page 41: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

• Specialization brought expertise

• Artisans – skilled craft workers who made pottery or woven goods

7. Job Specialization

Page 42: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Phoenician Sea Traders

Also invented the Alphabet – “phoenemes”

Page 43: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

• Expressed the beliefs and values of people who created them

• Temples and palaces reassured people of the strength and power of their government and religion

8. Art and Architecture

Page 44: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Defensive Walls

Page 45: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Assyria

1100 B.C.

Page 46: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Hittites

1400 B.C.

Invaders; learned to extract iron from ore

Page 47: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Persian Empire522 to 486 B.C.

Page 48: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

Answer Question – Turn Into Tray

• Based on your reading AND discussion/lecture:

•  Where were the first civilizations and what were their names?  

• What evidences of civilization did they have?

Page 49: Unit 1 TECHNOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFORMATIONS (8000-600 B.C.E.)

HOMEWORK!!!

Developing a Thesis

• Compare and contrast the social and economic characteristics of agriculturally based societies with hunter-gatherer societies.