steps to civilization unit 3 social studies 7
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STEPS TO CIVILIZATIONUnit 3 Social Studies 7
Use your flip booklet to
record notes!
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Look Around You!
How did the world you see come to be the way it is?
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Why are you watching this PowerPoint instead of waiting outside a gopher’s hole, with a
spiked club in your hands?
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The reason we are….Lies far in the past when early humansbegan creating tools to help them makeuseful and beautiful objects
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People began farming instead of spending days searching for food
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They left their caves for the comfort of houses built from reeds, peat,
leather, wood and stone
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They built walls around their settlements and began to live
peacefully in settled communities
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These early changes were the first steps towards civilization and the first steps towards the life we know
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In this unit, you will examine:
• important changes in lives of early humans
• changes that affected lives of all people who followed them, including you!
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Early Beginnings
• Archaeologists found evidence showing at least 6 different species of humans having walked the earth
• These include first modern humans, the early Homo sapiens sapiens
• Evidence of Early Humans mapped on pg.44 Ancient Worlds text
TOP TITLE PAGE:•STEPS TO CIVILIZATION, NAME
BOTTOM EDGES OF EACH PAGE:•TOOLS WERE IMPORTANT•TOOLS TEACH US•ERAS•6 GROUPS OF EARLY HUMANS•EARLY HUNTERS•CRO-MAGNON HUNTERS•FARMING: A GIANT STEP•HOW FARMING GOT STARTED•CITIES: ANOTHER GIANT STEP•BOTTOM EDGE – LEAVE BLANK
Label Your Flip Booklet
CAPITALSPRINT NEATLY
CENTER
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Try This Mapping Activity
• Pg.44 AW - find title, legend, scale of map
• What information does each of these items give you?
• Describe where remains of of ancient humans were located in relation to major rivers. What pattern do you notice?
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Think for Yourself p.45
• Imagine yourself shipwrecked on a deserted island. Your mission is to survive on your wits alone. Your first task is to find food and water. You gather shellfish from the beach and find a stream. What now?
Group Activity
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Development of Humans
• Earth like deserted island for early humans
• Offered materials of nature, nothing else
• People survived finding ways to use materials to meet needs for food, shelter clothing
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Tools Were Important
• Made axes, knives, scrapers and spearheads using hard stone to chip pieces from another stone
• Various groups of humans created different tools depending on environment
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Tools Teach Us:
• How ancient peoples hunted• What they hunted (large or small prey)
• What each group’s life was like
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Tools Teach Us:
• How they cooked their food
• If they stored their food
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Lives changed drastically as they learned to make new tools
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Eras
• Scientists divided time early humans lived into three eras (periods of time)
• Eras were based on the materials in tools
»Stone Age
»Bronze Age
»Iron Age
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Scientific Evidence for 6 Groups of Early Humans
• According to Theory of Evolution each species of humans developed into the next group
• Some groups lived on Earth at the same time• Scientists do not all agree on names / dates for
each group• Support differences by analyzing fossil remains• Notice how each species used technology to
help them survive in their environment
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Early Humans
• Australopithecus
• Homo habilis (handyman)
• Homo erectus (upright man)
• Homo sapiens (Neanderthal)
• Homo sapiens (Cro-Magnon)
• Homo sapiens sapiens (modern human)
STOP. REFLECT. COMPLETE FILL-IN-BLANK REVIEW
Teams
• Australopithecus – Team 5
• Homo habilis (handyman) – Team 1 + Devlyn
• Homo erectus (upright man) – Team 4
• Homo sapiens (Neanderthal) - Team 2
• Homo sapiens (Cro-Magnon) – Team 6
• Homo sapiens sapiens (modern human) – Team 3
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Try This Timeline Activity
• Using criteria on Steps to Civilization Handout AW pages 47-49, construct a timeline in chart format
• Your chart may be produced with a computer or by hand on 11 X 17 paper
• Your goal is to show changes that took place from Australopithecus to Homo sapiens sapiens. List the changes on your time line
• Use the Mr. Donn site for information too!
Together, let’s review criteria for an excellent timeline
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Go Deeper with Technology
http://earlyhumans.mrdonn.org/index.html
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Early Hunters• In ancient times, people could not be certain of getting
dinner if they stayed in one place
• People ate wild plants when they were in season
• Wild animals were eaten when killed with tools of wood and stone.
• Early hunters followed migrating herds of animals, or travelled to places where they had found food in past years.
• Hunting was a way of life for early humans. Evidence found at may sites suggests that early humans (starting with Homo erectus) were skillful hunters
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Pause & Discuss
• What are the advantages and disadvantages of the hunter-gatherer lifestyles?
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North American Aboriginal people stampeded herds of bison off cliffs such as the one at Head-Smashed-in-Buffalo-Jump, Alberta.
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• Why do you think this hunting method encouraged people to live in communities?
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Cro-Magnon Hunters
• Followed great herds of animals that once travelled across Europe
• Some lived in caves• Others made tents out of skins of animals
they caught• Could pack up tents easily and bring them
as they followed herds of animals• Tools were much more efficient than those
of earlier people
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Cro-Magnon Hunters
• Invented blade tools and made tools from bone to help make clothing and shelters
• used wood, bone, and plant fibres to make tools
• Most of these materials rotted, leaving little or no evidence
• Only stone tools survived
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Cro-Magnon Hunters
• Invention of barbed harpoon important to growth of population
• Hunting became more efficient as hunting tools improved
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Put Yourself into the Time and Place of a Historical Event
• Imagine you are one of a band of early humans who travel together in search of food
• Work in a group to develop a short skit about your discovery of fire.
• See criteria on assignment card on next slide
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Assignment Card
• You eat roots, fruit, and berries whenver you find them.
• You eat raw meat because you do not kow about fire.
• You break animal bones open so you can eat the marrow.
• Then one day you see fire for the first time. • How does the fire start? How does it change
your life? What can you do now that you could not do before?
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Farming: A Giant Step
• most of time humans fed themselves gathering wild plants / hunting wild animals
• by 5000 years ago, people had begun farming in almost every part of world
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• Farming marks time when people began to grow plants and raise animals for food
• Humans began training animals to be of use to them
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• Switch to farming marks a gigantic change in how people related to the earth and their environment
• Instead of simply finding and taking what nature provided, people started to help nature along
• As farmers, humans started to take control of the production of food
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A Shift
• Shift from food gathering to food producing meant people could now be sure of getting enough to eat
• Dependable source of food allowed people to settle in one place
• As food became abundant, communities began to flourish
• Farming was a giant step towards the development of civilization
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How Farming Got Started
We can only speculate. We weren’t there.
Some Theories:
• Spilled-Grain Hypothesis
• Watching-the-Animals Hypothesis
• Moov’en-and-Groov’en Hypothesis
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Spilled-Grain Hypothesis
Neolithic women, noticed new grain plants grew when they accidentally spilled grain seeds. They tried scattering seeds on purpose – it worked!
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Watching-the-Animals Hypothesis
• Animals often find plants in places with water / good soil - Hunters saw pattern
• People stayed at sites, animals became tamer
• People started weeding / irrigating so plants would grow better
• Started saving seeds of better plants to plant
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Moov’en-and-Groov’en Hypothesis
• One season, nomads liked a site so much they stuck around
• Stayed so long they harvested a crop and then saw it grow to harvest stage again
• Groups learned to grow a crop from seed to harvest and then move on
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Remember
A hypothesis is a theory or opinion that has not been proven – a kind of educated guess about what the evidence means
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On your own, explain why you agree with one of the hypotheses described or propose one of your own.
Write down two facts or reasons to justify your hypothesis
• Spilled-Grain Hypothesis• Watching-the-Animals Hypothesis• Moov’en-and-Groov’en
Hypothesis
Activity:
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PAIR/SHARE ACTIVITY “Why Farming Began”
• Using Ancient Worlds pages 56-57, meet with a partner to discuss how the historian argued a hypothesis in the article “Why Farming Began”. Use the questions in the article to guide your discussion. Take turns reading the questions, and responding.
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Think for Yourself
• State your own hypothesis about how farming started.
• How is your hypothesis similar to and different from the one given in the article?
• Do you think the historian did a good job of supporting a hypothesis? Explain.
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Cities: Another Giant Step
Looking at how cities developed is like seeing civilization develop
• development of farming brought people together in communities
• people stopped farming when farmlands produced more food than was needed some
• some people developed others skill; moved closer together forming villages
• sometimes these villages grew into towns, and then cities
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Ancient Cities of the World
• In ancient times, cities homes of royalty and officials who held power
• Officials controlled surrounding land; decided who could farm
• Some cities grew around temple or place of worship
• Communities flourished because people could make a living (e.g, shopkeepers, craftspeople, artists, teachers, priests, and officials)
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Scientists Love to Discover Ruins of Ancient Cities
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Scientists want to know more about how ancient people lived and met
individual/common needs
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Seeing PatternsNote the development (changes) of different early civilizations
Nomadic groups travelling
People formed settled, organized communities
Communities grew into cities
Met other groups through trade or warfare
Cities developed unique characteristics; solve problems in different ways
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Charting Change
Using picture series on pages 62-63, Ancient Worlds:
• Make a 2-column chart. List stages (or changes) you see in column one.
• In column two, speculate on how each change must have affected people’s lives
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Pair/Share Your Chart
With a partner, discuss how the events described in the chart did or did not contribute to a more civilized life for people
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In Conclusion
• You have examined the big steps that led towards civilization.
• You have seen that tools played a crucial role at every step.
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Archaeologists found evidence showing at least 6 different species of humans have walked the earth
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Tools were important and teach us about daily life or early humans
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Scientists divided time early humans lived into three eras (periods of time) based on tools - Stone Age, Bronze Age, Iron Age
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Hunting was a way of life for early humans.
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Farming marks time when people began to grow plants and raise animals for food
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Looking at how cities developed is like seeing civilization develop ; see a pattern to the changes
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In Your Opinion
Which was the most important step in getting civilization started:
» Invention of fire» Tools for hunting» The beginning of farming» Technology for travel or» The beginning of cities
Remember to support your opinion
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THE END
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