Neolithic Revolution
World History
Sociology
Examples of Neolithic Revolution in the following topics:
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The Neolithic Revolution
- The Neolithic Revolution and invention of agriculture allowed humans to settle in groups, specialize, and develop civilizations.
- That change was the Neolithic Revolution.
- The beginning of the Neolithic Revolution in different regions has been dated from perhaps 8,000 BCE in the Kuk Early Agricultural Site of Melanesia Kuk to 2,500 BCE in Subsaharan Africa, with some considering the developments of 9,000-7,000 BCE in the Fertile Crescent to be the most important.
- Neolithic populations generally had poorer nutrition, shorter life expectancies, and a more labor-intensive lifestyle than hunter-gatherers.
- The way we live today is directly related to the advances made in the Neolithic Revolution.
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Habitat Loss and Sustainability
- Since the Neolithic Revolution, about 47% of the world's forests have been lost to human use.
- Since the Neolithic Revolution, nearly half of the world's forests have been destroyed for human use.
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The Earliest Cities
- The very first cities were founded in Mesopotamia after the Neolithic Revolution, around 7500 BCE.
- The conventional view holds that cities first formed after the Neolithic Revolution, with the spread of agriculture.
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Slavery
- Due to these factors, the practice of slavery would have only proliferated after the invention of agriculture during the Neolithic Revolution about 11,000 years ago.
- Although the trans-Atlantic slave trade ended shortly after the American Revolution, slavery remained a central economic institution in the southern states of the United States, from where slavery expanded with the westward movement of population.
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Neolithic Art
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Neolithic Art
- Sites in the ancient Near East are considered to belong to the beginning of the Neolithic.
- The Neolithic or New Stone Age was a period in human development that originated around 10,000 BC, lasting until 3000 BC.
- Sites in these locations that go back to approximately 9500 BC are considered the beginning points of the Neolithic period.
- Neolithic culture in the Near East is separated into three phases, Neolithic 1 (Pre-Pottery Neolithic A), Neolithic 2 (Pre-Pottery Neolithic B), and Neolithic 3 (Pottery Neolithic).
- Outline the different phases of the Neolithic period in the Near East and identify characteristics of each
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Ceramics in Neolithic China
- Painted pottery emerged in great numbers during the Neolithic period of the Yangshao and Longshan cultures.
- The Yangshao culture was a Neolithic culture that existed extensively along the central Yellow River in China.
- The Longshan culture was a late Neolithic culture in China, centered in the central and lower Yellow River.
- The Neolithic population in China reached its peak during the Longshan culture.
- Compare and contrast the pottery of the Yangshao and Longshan cultures of the Neolithic era.
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Mesolithic Art
- The later Neolithic period is distinguished by the domestication of plants and animals.
- Russian archaeologists prefer to describe such pottery-making cultures as Neolithic, even though farming is absent.
- These pottery-making Mesolithic cultures can be found peripheral to the sedentary Neolithic cultures.
- They created a distinctive type of pottery, with point or knob base and flared rims, manufactured by methods not used by the Neolithic farmers.
- Compare and contrast the Mesolithic period with the Paleolithic and Neolithic periods.
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Neolithic Monuments
- Neolithic art in western Europe is most well-represented by its megalithic (large stone) monuments.
- Megaliths, or large stones, are commonly used in the construction of passage tombs and typically date to the Neolithic.
- Newgrange contains various examples of abstract Neolithic art carved onto its rocks.
- Knowth is a Neolithic passage grave and monument located in the valley of the River Boyne in Ireland .
- Generalize about Neolithic cultural characteristics in Western Europe with reference to passage tombs and megaliths in particular
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Jade in Neolithic China
- Jade has been used in virtually all periods of Chinese history, and the earliest jades of the Neolithic Period were often quite simple and unornamented.
- Thus, the earliest jades of the Neolithic Period are often quite simple and unornamented, being used as ritual or decorative versions of the tools and weapons that were in ordinary use.
- During Neolithic times, the key known sources of nephrite jade in China for utilitarian and ceremonial items were the now depleted deposits in the Ningshao area in the Yangtze River Delta (during the Liangzhu culture, 3400–2250 BCE) and in an area of the Liaoning province in Inner Mongolia (during the Hongshan culture, 4700–2200 BCE).
- The Liangzhu culture (3400-2250 BCE) was the last Neolithic jade culture in the Yangtze River Delta of China.