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51 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
3 Questions
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Where Did We Come From
WHy Are We Here What's For Dinner |
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Paleolithic Age Dates
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C. 750,000-10,000 B.C.E
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Paleolithic Age (description)
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Rough chipped stones, wood and stone implements, nomadic, cooperative, sewn clothes, saught shelter, painted pictures, used fire.
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Paleolithic (meaning)
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Old Stone
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Archaic Homo Sapiens (date)
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200,000 B.C.E.
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Modern Homo Sapeiens (date)
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150,000 B.C.E.
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Homo Heilderbergensis
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Oldest humans
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Homo Neanderthalis
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Middle humans
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Homo Sapiens
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Youngest humans
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Pre-Civilization
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homo heilderbergensis
homo neanderthalis homo sapeins end of ice age mesolithic age |
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Early civilizations
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Paleolithic age
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Mesolithic Age
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10,000-8,000 B.C.E.
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End of Ice Age (cause)
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Plants have more time to grow, reproduce, and change.
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Venus of Willendorf (date)
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C. 24,000-27,000 B.C.E.
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Venus of Willendorf (description)
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Limestone, pregnant woman, 4 1/2 inches tall, made by women.
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Venus (Story)
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Her story tells of fertility, love, and pleasure. The goddess of love and beauty. Represents feminine aspect of all of us.
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Neolithic Age (date)
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C. 8,000-4,000 B.C.E.
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Neolithic Age (meanings)
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New stone/Agricultural Revolution
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Neolithic Age (description)
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Ground and polished stones, settles in small communities (permanent), food by farming (grow food instead of following) domestication of animals, use of wheel and axle (transportation), weave plant fibers (baskets), and clay pottery.
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5 key developemental Points
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Increase in population, property ownership, government and laws, specialization of labor, elaborate answers.
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wild wheat crossed with goat grass creating (2)
date + chromosomes? |
Emmer wheat (28 chr)
Einkorn wheat (28 chr) c. 8000 B.C.E. |
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Emmer crossed with another natural goat grass producing: (2). Date + chromosomes
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Bread wheat (42 chr)
Modern wheat (42 chr) c. 67000 B.C.E. |
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Other plant domestications (8)
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barley and lentils
rice and millet beans and potatoes maize (corn) yams |
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Barley and Lentils (date)
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c. 5,000 B.C.E.
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Rice and Millet (date)
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c. 4,000 B.C.E.
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Beans and Potatoes (date)
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C.5,500 B.C.E.
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Maize (date)
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c. 5,000 B.C.E.
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Yams (date)
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c. 3,000 B.C.E.
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silkworm + mulberry tree
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c. 3,000 B.C.E.
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The Age of Metal (2 ages)
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The copper and Bronze Age
The iron Age |
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The copper and bronze age (date)
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c. 4,000-1,000 B.C>E.
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What is bronze made of?
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Copper and Tin =?
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Bronze Age (description)
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servicable tools
civilizations grow |
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Civilizations grow in The Copper and Bronze Age (5 examples)
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government, builders, industries, trade, written records.
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The Iron Age (date)
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C. 1000 B.C.E. to present
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Iron Age (description (3))
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more durable tools,
tools and weapons, and allows for the rise of empires |
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who made iron and when?
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Hittites in 1200 B.C.E.
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Why anyone can be a soldier in the iron age.
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More people and better weapons
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Culture definition :
consists of...(1) |
ways of thinking, believing, and behaving that gives order to life.
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Culture is a result of... (1)
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a result of trail and error to control themselves and enviornment in which they live in.
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The culture of any group consists of (3)
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1. solutions to the problems of survival.
2. ideas and values that shapes rules of conducts. 3. useful and purposeful objects |
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culture traits
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a clue about the whole culture
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transmitting culture
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the only thing that keeps the culture alive
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world view vary
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things mean different things in different places.
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signs and symbols:
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Unify people (draw people together) emotionaly
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norms
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standards of behavior
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values
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concepts important/central to the people
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folkways
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story telling from one generation to the next
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mores
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norms that guide ethical behavior
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laws
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norms that are essential/rules
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rituals
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cultural values that express central values of culture.
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