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Preview Main Idea / Reading Focus The New Stone Age Development of Agriculture

Preview Main Idea / Reading Focus The New Stone Age Development of Agriculture Map: Growth of Agriculture Agriculture Changes Society. The Beginning of Agriculture. The Beginning of Agriculture. Main Idea

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Preview Main Idea / Reading Focus The New Stone Age Development of Agriculture

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  1. Preview Main Idea / Reading Focus The New Stone Age Development of Agriculture Map: Growth of Agriculture Agriculture Changes Society The Beginning of Agriculture

  2. The Beginning of Agriculture Main Idea The development of agriculture was a major turning point in human history and significantly changed the way in which many people lived. • Reading Focus • What new tools and technologies did early humans develop during the New Stone Age? • How did early agriculture develop and spread? • In what ways did the development of agriculture change Stone Age society?

  3. Neolithic Tools • Polished stones to make points • More specialized tools: • chisels • drills • saws Paleolithic Tools • Stones chipped to make points • Wood and bone tools • Nets from plant fibers and animal sinew The New Stone Age As prehistoric people developed more sophisticated tools, the Paleolithic Era gave way to the Neolithic Era.

  4. Contrast How did toolmaking in the New Stone Age differ from toolmaking in the Old Stone Age? Answer(s): Old Stone Age—chipped stones to produce sharp edges; New Stone Age—polished and ground stones to shape tools

  5. Plants Animals Growth of Agriculture • End of Ice Age • New plants • New food source • People learned to farm • Domestication • Larger food supply • Domesticating animals • Careful selection and breeding • 10,000 BC – dogs • Larger and more stable supply of meat, milk, skins, wool • Available plants, domesticated animals • Spread to regions: • Asia: rice • Africa: cattle • Mexico: corn • South America: potatoes Development of Agriculture The development of agriculture, about 10,000 years ago, radically changed how people lived. This shift to farming is referred to as the Neolithic Revolution.

  6. Identify Cause and Effect How did people benefit from farming and the domestication of plants and animals? Answer(s): more reliable food supply; people could pool labor and resources

  7. Early Farming Societies New Technologies • Small settlements • Villages and towns • Increase in trade • Societies became more complex • Social status, authority • Religion, megaliths • Warfare, disease increased • New tools and methods • Animals working in fields • Grindstones, pestles, pottery • Wool from sheep for yarn • Spinning and weaving • Copper, bronze, tin Agriculture Changes Society • Agriculture dramatically changed Stone Age societies by providing a larger and more reliable food supply. • Some people began to live as nomadic pastoralists. • Others gave up the nomadic lifestyle and formed settlements, pooling their resources. • As people began to make items from bronze, the Stone Age gave way to the Bronze Age, which began as early as 3000 BC in some areas.

  8. A Neolithic settlement in what is now Turkey Largest Neolithic site found Home to 5,000–6,000 people in 6000 BC Covered more than 30 acres People raised barley, wheat, sheep, goats Houses One main room with areas for sleeping and domestic tasks like cooking Religious shrines Çatal Hüyuk

  9. Ötzi the Iceman • Discoveries added to our knowledge of Neolithic societies • 1991- hikers discover frozen male body • Scientific tests performed • 5,300 years old, from Neolithic Era • Ötzi and belongings well preserved • Clothes: three types of animal skins stitched together • Leather shoes, woven grass cape, fur hat, backpack • Quiver with arrows, dagger, ax with copper blade • Scientists’ theories • Diet included coarse grains • Did not live in location where found • Might have been murdered

  10. Summarize How did the development of agriculture affect Neolithic societies? Answer(s): revolutionary changes; men and women assumed different roles; led to towns, government, religion, trade

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