bell ringer #11 9/25 & 9/29 we have discussed how eras can have definitive start and end points...

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Bell Ringer #11 9/25 & 9/29 • We have discussed how eras can have definitive start and end points (prehistory vs. history for example). Today we are learning about the “New Stone Age” and “Old Stone Age.” What do you think is the distinction between the two? When would it start and end? Who do you think would have been around at the time?

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Page 1: Bell Ringer #11 9/25 & 9/29 We have discussed how eras can have definitive start and end points (prehistory vs. history for example). Today we are learning

Bell Ringer #11 9/25 & 9/29

• We have discussed how eras can have definitive start and end points (prehistory vs. history for example). Today we are learning about the “New Stone Age” and “Old Stone Age.” What do you think is the distinction between the two? When would it start and end? Who do you think would have been around at the time?

Page 2: Bell Ringer #11 9/25 & 9/29 We have discussed how eras can have definitive start and end points (prehistory vs. history for example). Today we are learning

Paleolithic vs. Neolithic

Level One Individuals & Societies Northview IBMr. Pentzak

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RM38CLx5M1Q&safe=active

Page 3: Bell Ringer #11 9/25 & 9/29 We have discussed how eras can have definitive start and end points (prehistory vs. history for example). Today we are learning
Page 4: Bell Ringer #11 9/25 & 9/29 We have discussed how eras can have definitive start and end points (prehistory vs. history for example). Today we are learning
Page 5: Bell Ringer #11 9/25 & 9/29 We have discussed how eras can have definitive start and end points (prehistory vs. history for example). Today we are learning
Page 6: Bell Ringer #11 9/25 & 9/29 We have discussed how eras can have definitive start and end points (prehistory vs. history for example). Today we are learning

Paleolithic

• “Paleo” = old, “-lithic”= stone• Begins 2.6 million years ago with advent of

stone tools• Lasts until about 10,000 BCE• Sometimes referred to as “Old Stone Age”• Hominids + Homo Sapiens

Page 7: Bell Ringer #11 9/25 & 9/29 We have discussed how eras can have definitive start and end points (prehistory vs. history for example). Today we are learning

“Lucy”

• Oldest, most intact hominid ever found

• Approx. 3 million years old– Before stone tools!

• 3 ½ feet tall• Australopithecus

afarensis (Lucy is much easier to say!)

Page 8: Bell Ringer #11 9/25 & 9/29 We have discussed how eras can have definitive start and end points (prehistory vs. history for example). Today we are learning

Neolithic

• “Neo” = new, “-lithic” = stone• 10,000 BCE to about 2,000 BCE• Called the “New Stone Age”• Only Homo Sapiens live into this era– Otzi

Page 9: Bell Ringer #11 9/25 & 9/29 We have discussed how eras can have definitive start and end points (prehistory vs. history for example). Today we are learning

Dwellings

• Paleolithic Age- Caves, huts, and skin tents• Neolithic Age- Mud bricks with timber

Page 10: Bell Ringer #11 9/25 & 9/29 We have discussed how eras can have definitive start and end points (prehistory vs. history for example). Today we are learning
Page 11: Bell Ringer #11 9/25 & 9/29 We have discussed how eras can have definitive start and end points (prehistory vs. history for example). Today we are learning
Page 12: Bell Ringer #11 9/25 & 9/29 We have discussed how eras can have definitive start and end points (prehistory vs. history for example). Today we are learning

Lifestyle

• Paleolithic – Nomadic – Groups of up to 50– Tribal– Hunters & Gathers

• Neolithic– Sedentary– Permanent settlements– Raise livestock/agriculture– Family structure changes

Page 13: Bell Ringer #11 9/25 & 9/29 We have discussed how eras can have definitive start and end points (prehistory vs. history for example). Today we are learning

Tools

• Paleolithic– Chipped stone– Wood weapons– Light, dull tools

• Neolithic– Polished stone– Sharpened by grinding

Page 14: Bell Ringer #11 9/25 & 9/29 We have discussed how eras can have definitive start and end points (prehistory vs. history for example). Today we are learning

Clothes

• Paleolithic– Animal skin/hide

• Neolithic– Animal skin/hides– Woven garments

Page 15: Bell Ringer #11 9/25 & 9/29 We have discussed how eras can have definitive start and end points (prehistory vs. history for example). Today we are learning

Gov’t.

• Paleolithic– Tribal/clan– Ruled by elders or the powerful – Matriarchal or patriarchal

• Neolithic– Military and religious leaders– Monarchy develops– Less equality among the sexes

Page 16: Bell Ringer #11 9/25 & 9/29 We have discussed how eras can have definitive start and end points (prehistory vs. history for example). Today we are learning

Economy

• Paleolithic– No private property– Limited trade

• Neolithic– Concept of private property emerges– Land, livestock and tools could now be “owned”– Trade networks develop

Page 17: Bell Ringer #11 9/25 & 9/29 We have discussed how eras can have definitive start and end points (prehistory vs. history for example). Today we are learning

Health

• Paleolithic– Healthier diet of meat and wild plants– Humans were taller and lived longer compared to

Neolithic people• Neolithic– Less nutritious diet of mostly grains– People were shorter and had a lower life

expectancy– New diseases emerge– Women had more children

Page 18: Bell Ringer #11 9/25 & 9/29 We have discussed how eras can have definitive start and end points (prehistory vs. history for example). Today we are learning

Art

Paleolithic• Cave paintings

Neolithic• Wall paintings• Pottery • Bone flute

Page 19: Bell Ringer #11 9/25 & 9/29 We have discussed how eras can have definitive start and end points (prehistory vs. history for example). Today we are learning

Food

• Paleolithic– Hunters and Gatherers – Meat, fish, berries– Store only what they can carry

• Neolithic– Grew crops such as corn, wheat, beans– Storage for surplus

Page 20: Bell Ringer #11 9/25 & 9/29 We have discussed how eras can have definitive start and end points (prehistory vs. history for example). Today we are learning

Main Discovery

• Paleolithic– Fire– Rough stone tools

• Neolithic– Agriculture– Tools of polished stone

Page 21: Bell Ringer #11 9/25 & 9/29 We have discussed how eras can have definitive start and end points (prehistory vs. history for example). Today we are learning

Stone Age Toolkit• Take out a sheet of paper • Please take out a blank sheet of paper. Flip the paper so that the

longest side is horizontal. Divide the sheet into ten equal boxes• When the images are projected, please sketch each object in the

boxes.• As we go through the interactive, please label each artifact and

write a brief description.

• http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/ancient/stone-age-toolkit.html

Page 22: Bell Ringer #11 9/25 & 9/29 We have discussed how eras can have definitive start and end points (prehistory vs. history for example). Today we are learning

Homework

• Create a flyer that will persuade a human living in 10,000 BCE to either switch to agriculture from hunting and gathering or switch from hunting and gathering to agriculture. Include information from today’s lesson!

• This should be colorful, factual, and interesting!

Page 23: Bell Ringer #11 9/25 & 9/29 We have discussed how eras can have definitive start and end points (prehistory vs. history for example). Today we are learning

Study Guide• MR. LIP• Paleolithic• Neolithic• Comparison notes• Otzi• “Lucy”• Hominids• Bipedal • Homo Sapiens• Human Migration• Push/Pull Factors

• Agriculture• Prehistory vs. History vs.

Big History• Hunter Gatherers• Matriarchal• Patriarchal• Nomad• Era• BCE & CE• BC & AD• Calculating/Ordering

dates