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Chapter 2 / Section 1

Chapter 2 / Section 1. The First People. The First People. The Big Idea. Prehistoric people learned to adapt to their environment, to make simple tools, to use fire, and to use language. Main Ideas Scientists study the remains of early humans to learn about prehistory.

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Chapter 2 / Section 1

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  1. Chapter 2 / Section 1 The First People

  2. The First People The Big Idea Prehistoric people learned to adapt to their environment, to make simple tools, to use fire, and to use language. • Main Ideas • Scientists study the remains of early humans to learn about prehistory. • Hominids and early humans first appeared in East Africa millions of years ago. • Stone Age tools grew more complex as time passed. • Hunter-gatherer societies developed language, art, and religion.

  3. Scientists Study Remains • PREHISTORY – The time before there was writing • To study prehistory, historians rely on the work of archaeologists and anthropologists. ArchaeologistsAnthropologists Scientists who learn about past Scientists who study the physical human life by studying fossils and characteristics and cultures of artifacts humans and their ancestors

  4. ARTIFACTS Weapons, tools, and other things made by humans. FOSSILS Traces of plants or animals that have preserved in rock. Artifacts and Fossils

  5. Early Hominids • In 1959, archaeologists Mary and Louis Leakey, found bones of early ancestors of humans, called hominids, in East Africa. -- believed to be more than 1.5 million years old -- belonged to an Australopithecus (aw-stray-loh-PI-thuh-kuhs)

  6. Lucy • In 1974, anthropologist Donald Johanson, found bones from a hominid that is believed to have lived more than 3 million years ago in Hadar, Ethiopia. • Johansonnamed his find “Lucy.” • Lucy: - was bipedal: walks on two feet - was about 3 and ½ feet tall - was a vegetarian - Australopithecus afarensis

  7. Hominids and Early Humans • Four major groups of hominids appeared in Africa between 5 million and about 200,000 years ago, with each one more advanced than the one before.

  8. Stone Age Tools • The first humans lived during a period called the Stone Age. • The first part of the Stone Age is called the Paleolithic Era, or Old Stone Age. • Paleolithic times began roughly 2.5 million years ago and lasted until around 8000 B.C. • During this time people used stone tools.

  9. The First Tools • The earliest stone tools were found in Tanzania, in East Africa. • About 2.6 million years old. • Stones were struck against one another to create a sharp, jagged edge along one side. • Tools were used to cut and chop, or scrape root, bones, and meat.

  10. Later Tools • Improved tools were made out of flint, which was easier to shape and can become very sharp. • Began making hand axes and attached wooden handles to tools. • Attached wooden shafts/sticks to stone points to create a spear. • Stone Age people hunted deer, horses, bison, and mammoths.

  11. Hunter-Gatherer Societies • Early humans formed societies, or communities of people who share a common culture. • Nomadic hunters-gatherers , wandering in search of food/resources and gathering wild plants, seeds, fruits, and nuts. • Lived outside or took shelter in caves

  12. Language, Art, and Religion • The most important development of early Stone Age culture was language. −Allowed more relationships to form − Easier to hunt − Allowed food distribution • Early humans also expressed themselves in art: - cave paintings - carved figures out of stone, ivory, and bone • Items found in graves give clues about the development of first human religions during the Stone Age.

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