Term
What did Donald Johanson find? |
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Definition
The remains of a female hominim. |
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Term
What was the hominim remains named and why? |
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Definition
Lucy because that's what was playing when they were celebrating |
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Definition
Afar desert of Etheopia in northeastern Africa |
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Term
What is bipedalism and why is it an advantage? |
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Definition
Improved upright walking It is more energy efficient, frees the arms, exposes a small body surface to the sun which is important if you wanna venture beyond the rain forest or savana into the gasslands |
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Term
What tools did Paleolithic use? |
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Definition
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Term
What are Oldowan tools? How were they made? |
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Definition
Simple stone tools that consisted of splitting a stone in two to produce sharp edges on both fragments |
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Term
When do we think modern humans (Homo Sapiens) emerge? |
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Definition
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Term
What does Homo Sapiens mean? What were the two characteristics that these humans had that distinguished us from earlier lineages? |
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Definition
Means wise man 1) rapidly developing TECHNICAL SKILLS 2) CULTURAL CREATIVITY |
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Term
What is a forager society and where did they live? |
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Definition
Male dominated hunt mixed with communal gathering of vegetal foods (hunting and gathering) lived in sheltered places by cave enterences and rock overhangs, but also campsites with huts made from branches |
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Term
Why was obsidian important to a forager society? |
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Definition
It was a rare material (glass-like hard rock) to make tools with |
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Term
What are the primary beliefs in the development of gender roles? Do we truly know what gender roles were in prehistoric times? |
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Definition
Males and females spent most of their time collecting and preparing vegetal foods together. Male- dominated hunt was exta job NO we are not sure |
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Term
What does your book think the purpose of jewelry was? |
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Definition
Its beauty gives a distinction and makes it a symbol of whatever human emotions it is designed to express. |
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Term
what is an abstract symbol |
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Definition
Using something to express something else, such as jewelry for feelings |
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Term
When do we think that modern humans left Africa? |
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Definition
Between 80,000 and 60,000 years ago |
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Term
What were the food resources that the Australian Aboriginal people utilized? |
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Definition
Australian animals, marsupials, eels, seal, and plant life, wild millet and rice, solanum, yam daisy, quandong fruit, pine nuts, flax, acacia seeds, bracken, blindweed, (yam taro banana= northeast) |
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Term
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Definition
things or practices that were forbidden |
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Term
what is dreamtime in aborigonal studies? |
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Definition
The ancient period in which the lineage’s past was embedded. It consisted of stories, customs, and laws |
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Term
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Definition
a human line that was more primitive than but overlapped with h. sapiens they were already in europe when sapiens arrived |
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Term
where did neanderthals live? |
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Definition
Western Europe, altai mountains of eastern asia, middle east |
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Term
What differences do we see in neanderthals burial practices compared to from Homo Sapiens? |
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Definition
Neanderthals buried their dead without gifts of jewelry or sprinklings of red ochre ( symbol of lifeblood ) which modern humans did include in the graves |
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Term
What were the differences in body structure between h sapiens and neanderthals? |
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Definition
Neanderthals were smaller and more heavily boned than modern humans |
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Term
What were the differences between h sapiens and neanderthals linguistic ability? |
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Definition
Neanderthals were able to speak in a rudimentary way but did not possess the throat structures of homo sapiens |
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Term
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Definition
small stone, bone, (one clay) figures that depicted women some thin some bulging bulging were fertility goddesses western europe |
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Term
How did ice ages allow humans to migrate to North America? |
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Definition
Severedly altered flora and fauna on all continents ice sheet of alberta split, making a narrow passage allowing migration from alaska to north america possible for 500 years |
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Term
How did the climate change in Africa and Australia during the ice age? |
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Definition
The rain forest was reduced to only central Africa and the northern tip of Australia. The rest of the continents were exposed to drought. Northern Saharan, southern Kalahari in Africa, interior of Australia were giant deserts that cut deep into what were once rich savannahs and rain forests. |
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Term
Why did humans survive where many species disappeared in the ice age? |
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Definition
They had a great variety of survival tools. For hunting they had harpoons, fishhooks, darts, boomarangs, and were aided by dogs to hunt. Made the canoe so trade was possible. They made warm clothing as well |
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Term
What was the Beringia land bridge? |
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Definition
A land bridge caused by dropping sea levels that connected asia and north America to Siberia and the Americas it was ½ million square |
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Term
Why were land bridges important to early humans? |
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Definition
The southern ridge of Berignia allowed for possibility of survival as they contained forests of birth, willow, and alder while everywhere else was covered in ice or tundra. Also they allowed for passage and migration. |
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Term
Why do we think the Neanderthals disappear? |
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Definition
They were used to warm and wet climates. They could not adapt when the ice age hit. |
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Term
What ancestry do we think the Kennewick man and Spirit cave mummy are? |
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Definition
Ainu of Japan (East Asian) |
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