The practice of farming and domestication of animals provide food , wool , and other products.
Agriculture Revolution refers to the deliberate process of cultivating plants and domesticating specific animals
Domestication means to tame animals and then killing them for meat and other supplies that are useful to the group
Domestication allowed development of food surplus
Slide 2
Agricultural Revolution
what is agriculture? growing plants and domestication of animals for food, wool, milk etc
What is the agricultural revolution?
deliberate process to cultivate plants( corn growing etc) and domestication of animals
Agricultural Revolution:
1 Replaced hunter gatherer practices in most societies throughout the world (San and Chumash are exceptions because eg San still exist today and were not replaced)
2, Neolithic Agricultural Revolution occurred independently in scattered parts of the world at roughly the same time
Occurred about 12000 - 4000 yrs ago (after the ice age)
Examples : Mesopotamia (Fertile Crescent), Egypt (Nile Rv)
3.
Slide 3
Common Patterns and Practices
1. The climate changed after Ice Age pushed societies to find new food sources
Warmer weather in wetter areas of the planet allowed for flourishing of cereal plants and grasses
2. Gender roles: Women were main agriculturalists of Neolithic Age ,
Men were involved with domestication of wild animals : Domesticated sheep , goat , cattle from Fertile Crescent and
Domesticated llamas and alpacas from Andes
Rice in Asia, Yam in Africa , maize in Mesoamerica - women involved here
3.Social stratification occurs
4.variations of Agricultural Revolution
A)Fertile Crescent was the first area where Agricultural Rev occurred. Larger variety of plants/animals - more domestication
B)In Africa( in Sahara) : animals were domesticated before plants, everywhere else plants before animals . Thet domesticated cattle even before Middle East and India.
Donkey was domesticated near Red Sea.
Slide 4
common practices continues
Variations in Agricultural Revolution ....
5.In Americas : only animals domesticated were Llama and Alpaca. So had less domestication in americas.
-had less large animals for plowing,
- continued to rely on hunting to get meat, for 3500 yrs longer than Fertile Crescent
- lacked trade and innovative ideas/practices spread less
Slide 5
Globalization of Agriculture
1. Agriculture started in various regions (Mesopotamia or Yellow River Valley)
2. Spread to the rest of the region and outward
3. Agriculture spread in 2 ways:
A) Diffusion: Gradual spread of agricultural techniques, but without the extensive movement of people
B)Colonization or migration of agriculture, spread of moving farmers and their practices, as well as language and culture
This is often meant that earlier hunter gatherer were displaced, conquered, or absorbed
Places where Agriculture Begins :
Mesopotamia
Egypt
Indus River
Yellow River
Mesoamerica
South America
West Africa
Slide 6
Globalization of Agriculture
1.New Agriculture communities had to work cooperatively to clear land
2. they created irrigation systems needed for agriculture practices
irrigation= Artificial application of water to land or soil ( water was re-directed from river towards where crops grew)
Irrigation helps spread water spread evenly to farmland allowing for more sustained growth of crops
3. Different crops or animals were domesticated in different regions
Depending on weather patterns and local flora (plants) and fauna (animal) so agriculture was different in Americas vs Fertile Crescent
Agricultural practices drastically changed landscape
Over farming had specific and sometimes negative effects on soil; led to soil erosion
Slide 7
Language and Religion
1. Spread of the Indo-European languages along with agriculture; so culture spreads along with food
2.Religions such as Judiasm and Hinduism, spread with trade
3. China spread it's farming practices westward
4.India received agricultural practices from east and west alike
5. Africa :Spread of Agriculture in South Africa due to spread of Bantu language family (There are 400 Bantu languages )
Started in Cameroon and Nigeria and spread south and SE.(about 3000 BCE)
Bantu absorbed Paleolithic communities in S. Africa peacefully- not much warfare.
This brought diseases from their animals . Natives had no immunity to such diseases.
Slide 8
Bantu Language Family
Over 400 languages in Bantu Language
Started in S. Nigeria or Cameroon in about 3000 BCE, and spread south and southeast
Bantu absorbed the Paleolithic communities of S. Africa
Bantu had peaceful migrations, little warfare
Brought borne diseases with them, to which the natives had no immunity
Diseases had great affects on natives
Slide 9
Agricultural Practices
1. Took 10 000 yrs to spread agricultural practices all over the world.
2. Some places did not get these agricultural practices:
SW Africa
SW North America
Australia
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