2024-11-04 14:11:40
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@ -537,3 +537,69 @@ So what can we do
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- Iron Age
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- Iron Age
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- BP (before present)
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- BP (before present)
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- Others?
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- Others?
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## Lecture 2 (Didnt get title)
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- Prehistory
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- a
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- Archaeology
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- Study of past humans through the remains of their activities
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- What can we recreate / know / can't know from archaeology
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- Evolution of modern humans
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- Homo habilis 2.8 mya used stone tools
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- Homo erectus 1.5 mya used fire and complex tools and left africa
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- 100-50 kya homo sapiens migrated out of Africa, replaced previous hominids, and developed "behavioral modernity"
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- Eras
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- Paleolithic (Old Stone Age) - 3.3 mya - 12 kya
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- Lower (3.3 mya - 300 kya)
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- Middle (300 - 50 kya)
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- Upper (50-12 kya)
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- What makes these distinction salient
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- Lower: simple stone tools (pick best stone)
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- Middle: prepaired stone tools, art, burial pracitices
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- Upper: flint tools, complex tools (hook, lamps), cave art, figural art
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- But these are gradual changes, and always under revision
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- Cultures are named after type sites: eg. Oldowan tools from Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania
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- Three Age System
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- Stone Age - 3.3mya - 2000bce
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- Bronze Age 3300bce - 1200 bce
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- Iron Age 1200 - ?
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- Neolithic
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- Pre pottery Neolithic (10 000 - 6500 bce)
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- Pottery Neolithic (7000 - 4500 bce)
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- Begins with transition to agriculture and ends with metalworking
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- Younger Dryas event (global climate change) impacted hunter gatherer societies and increased food stress
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- Divisions within are marked by new tools, new use of animals, plants, and architecture
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- Agricultural Revolution
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- Domestication of plants (flora) and animals (fauna) - 10 000 bce
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- Repeated harvesting of wild varieties slowly fed to beneficial traits being selected, creating out modern domestic species
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- Goats were probably the first animals domesticated
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- Didn't necessarily lead to healthier or better outcomes
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- Beginning of Urbanism
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- Early Cities
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- Cataholouk
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- Jericho
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- Populations began to settle down and use the surpleuses created by effcient agricultural production to densify and specialize their populations
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- Complex architecture, public communal space
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- Case Study - Gobekli Tepe
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- Very early settlement (11500 - 10 000 BP)
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- Large stone circular rooms and decorated pillar
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- Evidence of food preparation (grain and animals bones, non-domesticated)
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- Abandoned around when agriculture was invented
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- Case Study - Ayn Ghazal
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- Pre pottery Neolithic settlement outside of modern day Amman Jordan
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- Discovered when a bulldozer litterally dug into it while exacating for a new road
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- Amazing picture of what Neolothic life looked like and the beliefs/practicies of people pre-writing
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- Excavated in the late 1980s (meaing the methods are very good)
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- Houses
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- Stone walls
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- Single room
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- Sunken plaster hearth
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- Likely wooden posts holding up a roof, later turned into a two room house with a door
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- Subsistence
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- Domestication of wheat, barley, lentils, peas, chick-peas
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- Animals remain show a huge reliance on goats, but also a wide variety of wild species
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- The skeletal remains of animals show the actual process of domestic an (change in body), meaning it was happening while people lived at Ayn Ghazal (smaller heads, teeth)
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- Statues
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- Lime plaster statues molded around a reed core, the reeds were tightened with twine
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- Statues were painted with ochre (red) and carbon (black)
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- Eyes were outlined in green/black
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- Lots of fine details in plaster, knees, toes, toe nails, small ears
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