1 / 18

The First People

The First People. Dating System. BC or BCE BC = Before Christ BCE = Before Common Era AD or CE AD = Anno Domini (what’s it mean?) CE = Common Era. How old is it?. Artifacts Archaeologists gather artifacts and other clues from dig site Carbon-14

Samuel
Télécharger la présentation

The First People

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The First People

  2. Dating System • BC or BCE • BC = Before Christ • BCE = Before Common Era • AD or CE • AD = Anno Domini (what’s it mean?) • CE = Common Era

  3. How old is it? • Artifacts • Archaeologists gather artifacts and other clues from dig site • Carbon-14 • Carbon-14 is an element found in all living things • Once something dies, the organism stops producing carbon, and it decays • The amount of carbon left tells us how long ago the organism died

  4. Prehistory • Writing not developed until 5000 years ago (around 3000 BC) • Stories, drawings, and artifacts • Prehistory (Prehistoric Times) • Time before written records

  5. Prehistory • What happened in prehistoric times ???? • Archaeologists, anthropologists, and historians piece together clues to figure out what happened

  6. Hominids • Hominids • The “Great Apes” • Humans and their early ancestors • Ancestors • Relatives who lived in the past • Creation / Evolution / both? • You decide based on your beliefs

  7. Hominid Taxonomy • Kingdom: Animalia • Phylum: Chordata • Class: Mammalia • Order: Primates • Family: Hominidae • Genus: Australopithecus / Homo • Species: (see the following slides)

  8. Australopithecus • Australopithecus • “Southern ape” • Africa 4-5 million years ago • Stood upright, walked on two legs • Brain 1/3 the size of modern humans • Australopithecus afarensis • “Lucy”

  9. Homo habilis • Homo habilis • “Handy man” • Africa 2.4 million years ago • Used early stone tools • Chopping and scraping • Brain ½ size of modern humans

  10. Homo erectus • Homo erectus • “Upright man” • Africa 2-1.5 million years ago • Used stone tools like hand ax • Learned to control fire • Migrated out of Africa to Asia and Europe

  11. Homo neanderthalensis • Homo neanderthalensis • “Neanderthal” • named for the Neander Valley, Germany, where first skull was found • Europe and Asia 350,000 years ago • Buried their dead • Developed language???

  12. Homo sapiens • Homo sapiens • “Wise man” • Africa 200,000 years ago • Migrated around the world • Modern humans • Controlled fire and more complicated tools • Developed language • Extremely important step

  13. The Stone Ages • Paleolithic Era • Old Stone Age • Paleo “old” / lithic “stone” • Mesolithic Era • Middle Stone Age • Meso “middle” / lithic “stone” • Neolithic Era • New Stone Age • Neo “new” / lithic “stone”

  14. Paleolithic Era • Beginning of humanity (4.5 million years ago) until about 10,000 BC (end of last ice age) • Sharpened stone tools • No developed agriculture • Hunter-gatherer societies • Hunter-gatherers • Hunted animals • Gathered plants, nuts, fruit • Societies • Shared common culture

  15. Mesolithic Era • About 10,000 BC to 5,000 BC • No developed agriculture • Used more complex tools • Hooks and spears for fishing • Bows and arrows for hunting • More complex societies • Migration over Bering Land Bridge after ice age  Beringia

  16. Neolithic Era • Began anywhere from 10,000 to 5,000 BC (depending on location) • The “Neolithic Revolution” • Development of agriculture • Agriculture • Farming  especially the “three sisters” • Domestication of plants and animals • Domestication • Taming wild plantsand animals for human use

  17. Neolithic Era • Very complex societies and tools • Specialization of skills • Lived in small “tribes”, ruled by a chief or a council of elders • Male-dominated groups

  18. Neolithic Era • Polytheistic • Worshipped nature • Built megaliths • “mega” = big / “liths” = stones • Like Stonehenge • For religion? For a calendar?

More Related