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Human interactions with the environment

Human interactions with the environment . Gabriela Johnson. Early man. Paleolithic era Stone age. Migration Moving from one place to another. Hunting Searching for food. Gathering Collecting food. Farmers and city dwellers. Plow. Surplus Extra supplies of food Domesticate

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Human interactions with the environment

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  1. Human interactions with the environment Gabriela Johnson

  2. Early man • Paleolithic era • Stone age. • Migration • Moving from one place to another. • Hunting • Searching for food. • Gathering • Collecting food.

  3. Farmers and city dwellers • Plow • Surplus • Extra supplies of food • Domesticate • To tame plants or animals for human use. • Plow • A tool used to cut, lift, or turn over soil. • Government • An organized system of leaders and laws.

  4. Mesopotamia • cuneiform • Zigguart • The largest and tallest temple in every Sumerian city-state. • Cuneiform • A writing system based on wedge-shaped symbols. • Trade • Giving up of one thing to get another. • Bronze • A yellowish-brown alloy of copper with up to one-third tin.

  5. Egypt • k • the Nile river • The worlds longest river. • Papyrus • A material prepared in ancient Egypt from the pithy stem of a water plant, used in sheets throughout the ancient Mediterranean world. • After life • Life after death. • Pyramid • A structure that served as tombs for Egyptian ruler.

  6. Greece • farmers • Farmers • A person who operates a farm or cultivates land. • Myth • A traditional legendary story. • Trade • The act of process of buying, selling, or exchanging commodities. • Peninsula • An area of land almost completely surrounded by water except for an isthmus connecting it with the main land.

  7. Rome • Colosseum • Colosseum • An ancient amphitheater in Rome. • Road • A long, narrow stretch with a smoothed or paved surface, made for traveling by motor vehicle, carriage, etc.. • Concrete • Formed by coalescence of separate particles into a mass, united in a coagulated, condense, or solid mass or state. • Forum • The market place or public square of an ancient Rome city, the center of judicial and business affairs.

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