chapter 9-1 the earliest americans. north and south america form a single stretch of land that...

14
Chapter 9-1 Chapter 9-1 The Earliest The Earliest Americans Americans

Upload: reynold-edwin-morgan

Post on 17-Dec-2015

219 views

Category:

Documents


3 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Chapter 9-1 The Earliest Americans. North and South America form a single stretch of land that reaches from the freezing cold of the Arctic Circle in

Chapter 9-1 Chapter 9-1 The Earliest AmericansThe Earliest Americans

Page 2: Chapter 9-1 The Earliest Americans. North and South America form a single stretch of land that reaches from the freezing cold of the Arctic Circle in

• North and South America form a single stretch of land that reaches from the freezing cold of the Arctic Circle in the north to the icy waters around Antarctica in the south.

Page 3: Chapter 9-1 The Earliest Americans. North and South America form a single stretch of land that reaches from the freezing cold of the Arctic Circle in

• From around 1.6 million to about 10,000 years ago, the earth went through an Ice Age.

• During this time of severe cold, much water froze into huge sheets of ice called glaciers.

• One strip of this land, called Beringia, connected Asia and North America.

Page 4: Chapter 9-1 The Earliest Americans. North and South America form a single stretch of land that reaches from the freezing cold of the Arctic Circle in

• Wild animals crossed this rocky land bridge and entered North America for the first time.

• Some of the Asians who hunted these animals followed them. These were the first Americans.

• Some historians say the first “Americans” arrived around 40,000 B.C. Others say as late as 10,000 B.C.

Page 5: Chapter 9-1 The Earliest Americans. North and South America form a single stretch of land that reaches from the freezing cold of the Arctic Circle in

• A recent discovery in Chile (Monte Verde), suggests people were well settled in that part of the Americas by 10,500 B.C. Archaeologists discovered pieces of animal hide and a child’s single footprint.

• Some experts say that people needed many thousands of years to travel that far so they think the first people arrived about 20,000 years ago.

Page 6: Chapter 9-1 The Earliest Americans. North and South America form a single stretch of land that reaches from the freezing cold of the Arctic Circle in

• Most experts believe the earliest Americans traveled by foot across the land bridge. Some scholars believe they may have paddled from Asia to the Pacific coast in small boats.

• The oldest skull found in the Americas was dated to about 11,000 B.C. in Mexico City. May be related to the Ainu people of Japan.

Page 7: Chapter 9-1 The Earliest Americans. North and South America form a single stretch of land that reaches from the freezing cold of the Arctic Circle in

• First Americans lived as hunters. Their favorite target for the hunt was the huge mammoth.

Page 8: Chapter 9-1 The Earliest Americans. North and South America form a single stretch of land that reaches from the freezing cold of the Arctic Circle in

• One animal alone gave enough meat, hide and bones to feed, clothe and house many people.

• Over time, the mammoths died and people began to hunt smaller animals such as rabbits, deer and to fish.

• They also began to gather plants and fruits to eat.

Page 9: Chapter 9-1 The Earliest Americans. North and South America form a single stretch of land that reaches from the freezing cold of the Arctic Circle in

• Between 12,000 and 10,000 B.C. the climate changed.

• The Ice Age ended and the world warmed up again.

• The huge sheets of ice melted, and the oceans rose again to cover the land bridge that connected Asia to the Americas.

Page 10: Chapter 9-1 The Earliest Americans. North and South America form a single stretch of land that reaches from the freezing cold of the Arctic Circle in

• About 7,000 B.C. the people living in central Mexico starting farming.

• By 3,400 B.C. they were growing squashes, beans, chilies and the most important crop—corn.

• In four months a family of three could grow enough corn to feed it for two years.

• Growing food gave people a more reliable food supply—more people could be fed, they were healthier and lived longer—the population grew.

Page 11: Chapter 9-1 The Earliest Americans. North and South America form a single stretch of land that reaches from the freezing cold of the Arctic Circle in

The Olmec CivilizationThe Olmec Civilization

• Begin in an area called MesoAmerica: South central Mexico to northern Honduras.

• Sometimes called MesoAmerica’s “mother culture”

• 1200 B.C.—the Olmecs developed the first complex societies in the Americas.

• The Olmec thrived between 800-400 B.C. and lived off the Gulf coast of Mexico.

Page 12: Chapter 9-1 The Earliest Americans. North and South America form a single stretch of land that reaches from the freezing cold of the Arctic Circle in

• The region they lived in had advantages:•   Abundant deposits of salt, tar, clay,

rubber, hard stone and fresh water from rivers• 1860—worker discovered a sculpture—five

feet tall—8 tons—an enormous head wearing a headpiece.– Giant monuments built over 44 tons– The Olmecs worshipped the jaguar spirit

•  

Page 13: Chapter 9-1 The Earliest Americans. North and South America form a single stretch of land that reaches from the freezing cold of the Arctic Circle in

• Archaeologists had never seen anything like it in the Americas

• They played one of the first “ball games” in the Americas

• http://www.aztec-history.com/aztec-ball-game.html

Page 14: Chapter 9-1 The Earliest Americans. North and South America form a single stretch of land that reaches from the freezing cold of the Arctic Circle in

New World v. Old World foodsNew World v. Old World foods

• New World Foods• Avocado, Southern Mexico• Beans, Central America• Cacao (chocolate), Southern

Mexico• Corn, Central America• Peanuts, South America

(Bolivia)• Peppers, Central America

(Peru)• Potatoes, South America

(Bolivia)• Tomatoes, Southern Mexico

• Old World Foods• Cattle, Turkey• Coffee, Ethiopia• Pigs, South West Asia• Rice, India• Sheep & Goats, Middle East

(Iraq, Iran)• Soybean, Northeastern China • Sugar Beets, Europe (Austria)• Wheat, Turkey• Yams, Africa