post pleistocene adaptations

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Post Pleistocene Adaptations Cultural Change after the Last Glaciation

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Post Pleistocene Adaptations. Cultural Change after the Last Glaciation. Post Pleistocene Adaptations. Mesolithic and Archaic - After last glaciation in Europe and New World. Forest Adaptation. Desert Adaptation. Old World (Mesolithic). Maglemosian 9500-6000BP. Natufian - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Post Pleistocene Adaptations

Post Pleistocene Adaptations

Cultural Change after the Last Glaciation

Page 2: Post Pleistocene Adaptations

Post Pleistocene Adaptations

Mesolithic and Archaic - After last glaciation in Europe and New World.

Old World (Mesolithic)

New World (Archaic)

Forest Adaptation Desert Adaptation

Maglemosian9500-6000BP

Eastern Archaic9,500BP - domestication

Natufian11,000-10,000BP

Desert Culture9,500BP - domestication

Page 3: Post Pleistocene Adaptations

Natufian Plastered Skull

Page 4: Post Pleistocene Adaptations

The ArchaicNew World Post Pleistocene Adaptations

Desert Culture

Page 5: Post Pleistocene Adaptations

The Neolithic Revolution

Beginning of transformation from food foraging to food production.

Several independent “hearths of domestication”

Transformation in subsistence accompanied by:

Hierarchical social structure

Increase in division of labor Population increase

Greater population density

Increased tradeMore rapid culture change

Sedentary farming communities

Page 6: Post Pleistocene Adaptations

Hearths of Domestication

Page 7: Post Pleistocene Adaptations

Spread 8,000 - 5,000 BP

Earliest evidence of domestication of plants and animals

Beginnings ca. 14,000 BP

Sites include: Jericho, Palestine; Jarmo, Iraq.

Dates:

The “Fertile Crescent”

Page 8: Post Pleistocene Adaptations

JERICHO (Tell es-Sultan)

Photo credits: Erwin Puruckerhttp://members.surfeu.de/purucker/totesmeer_d.htm

Jericho is a city in Palestine on the occupied West Bank of the Jordan River. Perhaps the oldest town in the world, dating back more than 10,000 years.

It lies 260 meters below sea level, making it also the lowest town on earth.

Proto-Neolithic -- construction at the site apparently began before the invention of agriculture, with construction of stone Natufian culture structures beginning earlier than 9000 BC.

Pre-Pottery Neolithic A, 8350 BC to 7370 BC. A four hectare settlement surrounded by a stone wall, with a stone tower in the centre of one wall. Round mud-brick houses. Use of domesticated emmer wheat, barley and pulses such as beans, peas, and lentils and hunting of wild animals.

Pre-Pottery Neolithic B, 7220 BC to 5850 BC. Expanded range of domesticated plants. Possible domestication of sheep. Apparent cult involving the preservation of human skulls, with facial features reconstructed from plaster and eyes set with shells in some cases.

Page 9: Post Pleistocene Adaptations

Spread of Food Production in Old World

Page 10: Post Pleistocene Adaptations

Mesoamerica

Page 11: Post Pleistocene Adaptations

El Riego Phase 6500 - 5000BC This phase shows evidence of wet-season and dry-season camps, hints of plant cultivation, chipped stone tools, groundstone implements, nets, coiled baskets, twined mats and ritualistic multiple burials.

Coxcatlán Phase 5000-3500 BC This phase contains fewer sites with larger groups of people for a longer time, firm evidence of cultivation of corn, beans, squash and chili peppers, chipped and groundstone tools, and improved basket making and netting

Abejas Phase 3500-2300 BC Attributes of this phase are possible year round pit house villages along the river terraces, a diet consisting of 20% agricultural products, evidence of domestication of dogs, new types of chipped and groundstone artifacts, split-stitch baskets and possibly cotton threads

Tehuacán Sequence (First three stages)

Harrington , S.P.M.

Earliest Agriculture in the New World (ArchaeologyVolume 50 Number 4, July/August 1997)

A 10,000-year-old squash seed from Oaxaca. Dating of squash seeds from a cave in Oaxaca, Mexico, has confirmed that plant domestication in the Americas began some 10,000 years ago. The new finding, reported by Smithsonian archaeologist Bruce Smith in the journal Science, indicates that planting began in the New World about the same time as in the Near East and China. Ajuereado Phase (ended well before 6500

BC) The attributes of this phase are traces of cave occupation and a few chipped stone tools

Ajalpan Phase (1500-900 BC) Attributes of this phase are wattle and daub villages, evidence of subsistence farming, corn, beans, squash, chili peppers, amaranth, avocados, sapotes, cotton and figurines

Page 12: Post Pleistocene Adaptations

NeoAmerican PeriodCahokia

Page 13: Post Pleistocene Adaptations

NeoAmerican PeriodLa Venta

Phase I – Site established along N/S axis; major mounds established.

Phase III – Northern enclosure with small mounds; pavements; green serpentine jaguar masks; figurine cache….

Phase II – Flanker mounds added, entire site covered with pink clay; monumental basalt sculpture begins.