Resources for the paleolithic period

    • [DOC File]Essay #1: Explain how the Neolithic Revolution led …

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      The Paleolithic Period. Green History, Chapter 3. Stearns, pp. 2-12. Paleolithic: Stone Age (SPRITE characteristics) 1. mankind most primitive/isolated state; nomads (had a psychological effect also)--mankind begins in Africa & moves outward; end of Ice Age ca. 12000 BCE means . movement outward

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    • [DOC File]Period 1: Technological and Environmental …

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      Aug 08, 2010 · Period 1: Technological and Environmental Transformations, to c. 600 B.C.E. Key Concept 1.1: Big Geography and the Peopling of the Earth. The term Big Geography draws attention to the global nature of world history. Throughout the Paleolithic period, humans migrated from Africa to Eurasia, Australia and the Americas.

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    • [DOC File]para 1

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      1. The Paleolithic Age or Old Stone Age (3 million–10,000 years ago) a) The hunting and food gathering of Paleolithic people shaped their social development. b) Paleolithic people developed: (1) Spoken language (2) Bone, wood, and stone tools (3) Control of fire (4) Mythic-religious ideas to explain nature, birth, sickness, and death (5 ...

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    • [DOC File]www.rcboe.org

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      Period 1: The Period of Technological and Environmental Transformations, up to 600 B.C.E. Key Concept 1.1. The term Big Geography draws attention to the global nature of world history. Throughout the Paleolithic period, humans migrated from Africa to Eurasia, Australia, and the Americas.

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    • [DOCX File]Key Concepts Study Guide, Period #1.docx

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      The term “Big Geography” draws attention to the global nature of world history. Throughout the Paleolithic period, humans migrated from Africa to Eurasia, Australia, and the Americas. Early humans were mobile and creative in adapting to different geographical settings from savannah to …

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    • [DOC File]Paleolithic and Mesolithic Tool Use

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      Paleolithic and Mesolithic groups sustained themselves by hunting and gathering. This practice is known as foraging. Rather than produce food themselves, hunter-gatherer societies lived off the resources from the land. They killed birds and animals for food, especially mammoths, bison, deer and rodents.

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    • [DOCX File]Summary - iBlog Teacher Websites – Dearborn …

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      During the Paleolithic Age, people obtained food by hunting animals and gathering plants. They did not have a stable, or dependable, food supply. Wild plants and animals grew scarce when people stayed in one area for too long. And hunting was dangerous.Hunters were often injured or killed.

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    • [DOCX File]South Buffalo Charter School / Home

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      It was during the Paleolithic Era that humans populated all of the continents of the earth (except Antarctica). These migrations were not because people wanted to explore. These migrations were because people needed natural resources and were nomadic. After about 70,000 years, people were everywhere. Then the Neolithic Revolution began…

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    • [DOCX File]Vocab Word - Commack Schools

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      The humanoid species that emerged as most successful at the end of the Paleolithic period. Hunting and gathering The original human economy, ultimately eclipsed by agriculture; groups hunt for meat and forage for grains, nuts, and berries.

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    • [DOCX File]mrsryanancientciv.weebly.com

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      a. the pattern of weather conditions in a certain area over a long period of time _____ Anthropology. b. the study of the past based on what people left behind ... _____ Paleolithic. m. an area with one or more features that make it different from surrounding areas ... _____ Resources. q. materials found in the earth that people need or value ...

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