TEACHERS
GALLERY
PRICING
SIGN IN
TRY ZURU
GET STARTED
Loop
Audio
Interval:
5s
10s
15s
20s
60s
Play
1 of 9
Slide Notes
Download
Go Live
New! Free Haiku Deck for PowerPoint Add-In
Neolithic Age
Share
Copy
Download
0
289
Published on Apr 20, 2016
No Description
View Outline
MORE DECKS TO EXPLORE
PRESENTATION OUTLINE
1.
The Neolithic Age
From 8,000 to 3,000 B.C.
By Mikayla Whipple
Photo by
Kaptain Kobold
2.
Vocabulary
Nomad- highly mobile people who moved from place to place foraging.
Hunter-gatherers- Nomadic groups whose food supply depends on hunting animals and collecting plant foods.
Neolithic Age- the agricultural revolution, the far-reaching changes in human life resulting from the beginnings of farming.
Slash-and-burn farming- cutting trees or grasses and burning them to clear a field.
Domestication- the taming of animals.
Photo by
Krista76
3.
Agricultural Revolution
Scientists believe the change in climate was the main reason for the revolution.
It turned into a steady source of food for all of the people.
Scientists believe the change in climate was the main reason for the revolution.
The shift from hunter-gathering to producing food, is a representation of one of the greatest breakthroughs in history.
Photo by
donnamarijne
4.
Farming Methods
Slash-and-burn farming was one of the main methods the Nomads used.
They would plant crops in one place for a year or two, then move to another place and just switch back and forth.
Photo by
Mal B
5.
Domestication of Animals
Since hunters had a vast knowledge of wild animals, people started to domesticate them.
They domesticated horses, dogs, goats, and pigs.
Pastoral nomads, or wandering herders, domesticated sheep, goats, camels, and other animals.
They took herds of different animals then put them into an enclosure to keep as a food source and to tame.
Photo by
keeva999
6.
Jarmo
Jarmo was an archaeological digging site in the Zagros Mountains in northeastern Iraq.
According to an archaeologist named Robert Braidwood, the region favored the development of agriculture.
Wild wheat and barley, along with wild goats, pigs, sheep, and horses all thrived near the Zagros Mountains.
Photo by
sdhaddow
7.
Villages Grow and Prosper
People changing from hunting and gathering to farming and herding took place more than one time.
Neolithic people developed agriculture independently.
From Africa to Peru, one by one they all discovered agriculture and farming.
Photo by
byb64
8.
Farming Developmentation
Africa- Nile River Valley developed by growing wheat, barley, and other crops.
China- Farmers along the middle stretches of the Yellow River domesticated wild rice.
Mexico and Central America- Farmers cultivated corn, beans, and squash.
Peru- Farmers in the Central Andes were the first to grow tomatoes, sweet potatoes, and white potatoes.
Photo by
DMahendra
9.
Catal Huyuk
It means the "forked mound", located on a fertile plain in south-central Turkey, near a twin-coned volcano.
Farmers produced large amounts of wheat, barley, and peas.
Villagers raised and domesticated sheep and cattle.
The new way of life also had drawbacks, though.
Floods, fire, drought, and other natural disasters along with diseases such as malaria were all drawbacks.
Photo by
Stuck in Customs
Friend of Haiku Deck
×
Error!