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Explore the migration of the first Americans, their hunting practices, and the development of civilizations like the Olmec, Maya, and Aztec. Discover the challenges they faced and how they adapted to new environments.
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Chapter 1 Section 1 Migration to the Americas
Vocab. and Key Terms • Archaeology – • Artifact – • Nomad – • Migration – • Maize – • Carbon Dating – • Culture – • Source – • Estimate – • Ice Age –
The Journey From Asia • The First Americans • Hunters and Gatherers • Migrated from Asia • Crossed the Land Bridge to populate North and South America
Crossing the Land Bridge • The Ice Age • Began about 100,000 years ago. • Ended about 12,000 years ago. • Period of low sea level and extreme cold • Massive sheets of ice, or glaciers, covered much of the Earth.
Crossing the Land Bridge (cont.) • “Beringia” • The Land Bridge • Exposed during the period of the lowest sea levels during the Ice Age. • Connected Siberia (North East Asia) to what is now Alaska (northwestern tip of the Americas) • Now Lies under the bearing sea
Searching for Hunting Grounds • Nomads • Early Americans were people who moved from place to place • Ate grains and fruits • Depended largely on hunting for food • In search of food, and likely following migration patterns of animals, the first Americans crossed the land bridge into Alaska and Canada. link • Migration • Movement of a large number of people to a new homeland. • During the ice age, many people crossed the land bridge and spread across the Americas. • Spread as far east as the Atlantic Coast • Spread as far south as the tip of South America.
Hunting for Food • Huge Mammals • Early Americans found massive mammals when they arrived • Saber Toothed Tiger, Wooly Mammoth, and the Mastodon • Served as a great source of food • A single mammoth could feed a group for months • Nomads used every part of animal. • Used skin for clothing and bones for weapons, tools and building shelters.
Hunting for Food (cont.) • Early Americans were skilled and hunting the animals • Used spears fashioned from wood and stone • Hunted in large groups and would overwhelm the animals
Hunting for Food (cont.) • Ice Age Ends • About 15,000 years ago, temperatures begin to rise • Glaciers melted and ocean levels rose • Beringa is covered again • America is cut-off from Asia
Hunting for Food (cont.) • New challenges for hunters • Mammoths and other large animals begin to die out • Overhunted by newly isolated Early Americans • Environmental changes impact animals’ ability to survive • Early Americans forced to find other sources of food
Settling Down • Agriculture changed the way of life for early Americans • The disappearance of hunted animals had a great impact of the way of life • Hunted smaller game • Caught fish • Gathered berries and grain • Began farming for the first time.
Farming/Agriculture First American farmers learned to plan Maize in what is now Mexico. • Provided steady and reliable food source • Also Planted pumpkins, beans, and squash • Reduced need to move around • Allowed time to spend on other activities besides hunting • Improved overall quality of life
Establishing Cultures • Some early Americans continued to be nomadic. • Others settled into communities • Villages have been found dating back as far as 5,000 years • Early people built shelters from clay, stone, and wood • Made pottery and cloth • Developed common customs and beliefs that eventually became their own culture.
Chapter 1 Section 2 Cities and Empires
Vocab. and Key Terms • Civilization • Theocracy • Hieroglyphics • Quechua • Quipu • Terraces • Complex • Link • Olmec • Maya • Aztec • Inca
Before Europeans • Great civilizations in Americas before arrival of Europeans in 1500s • The Olmec, Maya, and Aztec • Complex systems of writing, counting, and tracking time • Palenque • Early Maya city carved from granite • Wonder of design and craftsmanship
The Olmec • Flourished from 1500 B.C. – 300 B.C. • Settled along the Gulf Coast • Great farmers • Produced enough food for cities of over 1,000 people • Workers • Sculpted large stone monuments • Built stone pavement and drainage systems • Reasons for decline and collapse are unknown.
The Maya • Population may have reached 2 million people • Built many Huge Cities • Each city had a large stone pyramid • Temples sat on top of the pyramids and served as religious and political centers • Maya Theocracy • Believed the gods controlled everything • Priests held great power in Maya society
The Maya • Great Knowledge of astronomy • Predicted eclipses • Formed 365 day calendar • Hieroglyphics • Early form of writing • Used symbols and pictures to represent things, ideas, and sounds
Maya Transport and Trade • Trade Routes • No wheeled vehicle or horses • Carried goods by hand • On trails cut through jungle • Maize, vegetables, cotton, cloth, pottery, deer meat and salt • Carried goods by canoe • Up and down Mexico’s east coast • Jade statues, turquoise jewelry, and cacao beans
Decline of the Maya • Began to decline around 900 AD • By 1100 almost entire gone • Reasons for decline largely unknown • Possible cause • Soil exhaustion from farming and erosion • Unable to sustain food source for large numbers of people • Maya descendants still live in parts of Mexico and Central America
The Aztec • Hunters who thrived centuries after the Maya • Wandered through Mexico until they came to an Island in Lake Texcoco • Settled Tenochtitlan around year 1325 in what is now Mexico
Tenochtitlan • One of the greatest ancient American Cities • Wonder of labor and engineering • Center of trade • During its time, one of the largest cities in the Americas and the world
Aztec War and Religion • Aztec civilization grew into a military empire • Conquered all rival peoples nearby in the 1400s • Forced neighbors to work as slaves • Organized society around religion • Believed sacrifices were necessary to satisfy the gods • Sacrificed thousands of prisoners of war
The Inca • Well organized empire with structured society • Largest of early American civilizations • Stretched more than 3,000 miles across the western highlands of South America • Built on war • Powerful army • Conquered peoples who did not resist were absorbed and allowed to participate in the empire. • Those who resisted were brutally punished
Life in the Inca Empire • Cuzco – Inca Capitol City • Connected to the population of over 9 million by over 10,000 miles of paved road • Founded around 1200 • Language • Quechua – official spoken Inca language • Quipus – System of record keeping • Used different colored strings with various knots to keep records • Used to keep information about resources such as grain stores.
Life in the Inca Empire (cont.) • Farming • Farmed mountainous land • Terraces • Broad platform carved into steep slopes • Stone walls held soil and plants in place • Grew maize, squash, tomatoes, peanuts, chili peppers, cotton, and potatoes
Chapter 1 Section 3 North American Peoples
Vocab. And Key Terms • Pueblo • Clan • Federation • Channel • Structure
Early Native Americans • The Hohokam , Anasazi, and The Mound Builders • Most advanced of early Native American civilizations
The Hohokam • Desert of what is now Arizona • Flourished from 300 to 1300 AD • Irrigation Channels • Trenches that carried water to their fields. • Left behind pottery, carved stone, and acid etched shells.
The Anasazi • 1 to 1300 AD (roughly same time as Hohokam) • Settled the Four Corners • Modern day Utah, Colorado, Arizona, and New Mexico
The Anasazi (cont.) • Pueblos • Stone dwellings built by Anasazi • Pueblo Bonito • Famous Anasazi Pueblo • Trade and religious center for Anasazi • Cliff Dwellings • Anasazi shelter built in the side of cliffs • Mesa Verde • In modern day Colorado • One of the largest cliff dwelling (held thousands of inhabitants)
The Mound Builders • Early North American Native Americans • Built mounds much like the Maya pyramids • Stretched from what is now Pennsylvania to the Mississippi River Valley
Mound Builders • Adena • Hunters and Gatherers • Ohio Valley (800bc) • Hopewell • Farmers and Traders • Midwest ( 200bc – 500ad) • Huge burial mounds shaped like animals
Cahokia • Largest Mound Builder Settlement • In Illinois • Built by the Mississippians (mound builder tribe) • Resembled great cities Mexico • Monks Mound • Largest of the mounds • Rises over 100 feet • Temple sat on top
Peoples of the North • Inuit • Settled the furthest north in North America • Near the Arctic Ocean • May have been last migrants to cross beringia • Built Igloos • Low lying snow block dwellings • Hunters and fishers
Peoples of the West • Northwestern Coast • Tlingit, Haida, and Chinook • Depended on forest and sea • Built wooden houses • Plateau Region • Nez Perce and Yakima • Lived in earthen houses • Many other native peoples lived along the west coast near modern day California.
People of the Southwest • Descendants of the Anasazi • Hope, Acoma, and Zuni • Built homes with adobe • Sun dried mud bricks • Farmers and traders • Trade route spread throughout the southwest and Mexico • Apache and Navajo • Settled the region in the 1500s • Hunters and gatherers • Built square homes called hogans
Peoples of the Plains • Nomadic people • Temporary homes • Tepees • Cone shaped skin tents • Comanche and Dakota • Captured and tamed wild horses • Became skilled riders who hunted and fought on horseback
Peoples of the East • Algonquian • Group of natives linked by similarities • Formed Federations • Governments that linked different groups • Formal law codes
Iroquois League • Five groups • Onondaga, Seneca, Mohawk, Oneida, and the Cayuga • At war with each other regularly • Great Peace • An alliance that was formed to create the Iroquois League • Created a constitution • Grand council of the leaders met to settle disputes
People of the Southeast • The Creek, Chikasaw, and Cherokee • Farmers • Grew corn, tobacco, and squash