Prehistory TO Neolithic
Prehistory TO Neolithic
Prehistory TO Neolithic
We call prehistory the Stone Age because most tools were made from
stone.
The Stone Age, whose origin coincides with the discovery of the oldest known stone
tools, which have been dated to some 3.3 million years ago, is usually divided into
three separate periodsPaleolithic Period, Mesolithic Period, and Neolithic Period
based on the degree of sophistication in the fashioning and use of tools.
PREHISTORIC AGES
PALEOLITHIC
MESOLITHIC
Blinklearning.com/media/prehistory
Blinklearning.com
EGALITHARIAN SOCIETIES
People did different tasks but all equally important
NO PERMANENT SETTLEMENTS
NO FOOD SURPLUS, lived day-to-day
At its most basic element, civilization is based on the food supply. Uncivilized man lives at
the mercy of the land and weather. He does not provide for times of need.
KEY PLANNERS
NOMADIC' HUNTER-GATHERERS
Move from campsite to campsite, following game and wild fruits and vegetables.
They built one of the earliest known structures or huts (terra amata, nice)
MESOLITHIC AGE
THE TIME BETWEEN THE END OF MOST RECENT PERIOD OF GLACIATION
(c. 10000 BC) AND THE BEGINNINGS OF AGRICULTURE
MESOLITHIC PEOPLE LIVED BY HUNTING, GATHERING, AND FISHING.
THE PERIOD IS CHARACTERIZED BY THE USE OF MICROLITHS.
Britannica.com
FLINT
KEY PLANNERS
MAGLEMOSIAN PEOPLE
Inhabitants of the Maglemosian Culture particularly in North Europe.
They were known to constructs Huts made of barks.
Maglemosian, named for a site in Denmark, is found in the Baltic region and N
England. It occurs in the middle of the Mesolithic period. It is theret hat hafted
axes, an improvement over the Paleolithic hand axe, and bone tools are found.
KEY PLANNERS
ERTEBLLE CULTURE
Is the name of a hunter-gatherer and fisher, pottery-making culture dating to the
end of the Mesolithic period.
They built huts, probably brush supported by posts. The huts were in no special
order. Fire pits located outside the huts indicate that most village functions were
performed outdoors, with the dwellings used perhaps for storage and sleeping.
Blinklearning.com
NEOLITHIC AGE
THE PERIOD FROM THE BEGINNINGS OF AGRICULTURE TO
THE WIDESPREAD USE OF METAL TOOLS: The Bronze Age
and the Iron Age.
THE TIME WHERE CEREAL CULTIVATION AND ANIMAL
DOMESTICATION WAS INTRODUCED.
Brittanica.com
NEOLITHIC AGE
IT BEGAN IN THE NEAR EAST BY THE 8TH MILLENNIUM BC.
NEOLITHIC SOCIETIES IN THE NORTHWESTHERN EUROPE LEFT SUCH MONUMENTS AS
HENGES, BARROWS, CHAMBER TOMBS, AND SETTLEMENTS INSIDE CONCENTRIC DITCHES
SPANNED BY CAUSEWAYS
Significant change that took place with the Neolithic revolution was a dramatic increase in population.
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KEY PLANNERS
NEOLITHIC PEOPLES IN THE LEVANT, ANATOLIA, SYRIA, NORTHERN
MESOPOTAMIA AND CENTRAL ASIA
They were considered to be great builders, utilizing mud-brick to construct
houses and villages.
NATUFIAN HUNTER-GATHERERS
Belongs to the Epipaleolithic community that existed from 12,500 to 9,500 BC in
the Levant, a region in the Eastern Mediterranean.
They built the City of Jericho
KEY PLANNERS
CARNACOIS
A community beside the Gulf of Morbihanon the south coast of Brittany in the
Morbihan department in north-western France
Inhabitants of Carnac, a famous site composed of more than 3,000 prehistoric
standing stones.
Prehistoric Homes
http://www.crystalinks.com/earlyshelters.html
http://www.crystalinks.com/earlyshelters.html
Caves
Early humans are often thought of as dwelling in caves, largely because that is where we find traces
of them. The flints they used, the bones they gnawed, even their own bones - these lurk forever in a
cave but get scattered or demolished elsewhere.
http://www.crystalinks.com/earlyshelters.html
Catal Huyuk
https://www.google.com.ph/search?
q=catal+huyuk&biw=1920&bih=964&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&sqi=2&
ved=0ahUKEwju2_iBgdjPAhVrlFQKHVkkBLwQsAQIZA#tbm=isch&q=catal+huyuk+re
construction&imgrc=By7JkjHdoCJeQM%3A
One of the best preserved neolithic towns is Catal Huyuk, covering some 32 acres in southern Turkey.
Here the houses are rectangular, with windows but no doors. They adjoin each other, like cells in a
honeycomb, and the entrance to each is through the roof. The windows are a happy accident, made
possible by the sloping site. Each house projects a little above its neighbour, providing space for the
window.
https://www.google.com.ph/search?
q=catal+huyuk&biw=1920&bih=964&tbm=is
ch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&sqi=2&ved=
0ahUKEwju2_iBgdjPAhVrlFQKHVkkBLwQsAQ
IZA#imgdii=wXg2cbl7wUKOMM%3A
%3BwXg2cbl7wUKOMM%3A
%3BWu7WGYKqptqphM
www.google.com.ph/search?q=catal+huyuk&biw
www.google.com.ph/search?q=catal+huyuk&biw
Many of the houses excavated in Catal Huyuk are shrines (so many that the small section
of the site so far revealed is thought to be the religious quarter). Their walls are painted
with a wide range of subjects. These include hunting scenes, a picture of vultures setting
about human corpses, and even an elementary landscape
Skara Brae
http://www.juyopacking.com/cities/skara-brae.html
On the southern shore of Sandwick, Orkney, was a late Neolithic settlement that was inhabited between 3200 and
2200 BC. Eight prehistoric houses, connected by low covered passageways, have survived. The village was revealed
by a winter storm in 1850.
The eighth building is divided into small areas and may have been used as a workshop as fragments of antler and
bone were found in it.
http://www.juyopacking.com/image.php?
pic=../data_images/countries/skara-brae/skara-brae-04.jpg
Dating from around 3000BC, the earliest houses in the village were
circular
made up of one main room,
containing a central hearth,
with beds set into the walls at either side.
Opposite the main entrance was a shelved stone dresser - a
piece of Stone Age furniture that has come to represent Skara Brae
The ability to acquire food on a regular basis drastically changed life: there was
more stability and order. Life developed according to special patterns; they
had to follow seasons. Religion worshipped reproduction and fertility
EKISTIC ELEMENTS
NETWORKS
NATURE
SHELLS
MAN
SOCIETY
NATURE
VERY INNATE NATURE
EXTREME WEATHER
CONDITIONS
WILD BEASTS AND
ENEMIES
CONDITION OF NATURE
Lots of Essential Resources
Abundant trees, plants and land mass.
Clean source of water such as rivers,
lakes, and streams.
Rich in fruits, edible and wild animals.
Natural Calamities
Rainfalls, snow, earthquake, volcanic
eruption and etc.
MAN
EARLIEST FORM OF
MAN
PALEOLITHIC PEOPLE
MESOLITHIC PEOPLE
NEOLITHIC PEOPLE
PRIMEVAL MAN
NEANDERTHAL HUMANS
& HOMO SAPIENS
Survival
Depends on food to eat.
Shelter
Protection from wild life and
natural calamities.
EVOLUTION
Man evolves from time to
time.
PALEOLITHIC AGE
Egalitharian Societies
Nomadic' Hunter-Gatherers
Cro-Magnonman and Grimaldiman
MESOLITHIC AGE
Maglemosian people
Erteblle Culture
DIFFERENT PEOPLE
NEOLITHIC AGE
DIFFERENT LOCATIONS
Neolithic peoples in the Levant,
DIFFERENT TIME
Anatolia, Syria, Northern
DIFFERENT CULTURE
Mesopotamia and Central Asia
Natufian Hunter-Gatherers
Carnacois
COMPOSED
Windmill Hill People
OF PEOPLE
SOCIETY
SHELLS
ABUNDANT TREES
AND LANDMASS
CAVES
STONE AND WOOD
DWELLINGS
PROTECTION
WILD BEATS
AND ENEMIES
SHELTER
WEATHER
CONDITIONS
MANs SHELLS
Caves
Oldest and most common type of
dwelling.
NETWORKS
LANDMASS
RIVERS, STREAMS
AND LAKES
ANIMALS
PRESENT NETWORKS
PATHWAYS
NO roads. Only grasslands & forests.
NO bridges. Passing through rivers, and
lakes.
Transportation
Walking
Riding on animals.
NO Electricity, Plumbing,
Lighting and etc.
MAN
SOCIETY
COMPOSED
OF PEOPLE
EARLIEST FORM
OF MAN
DIFFERENT PEOPLE
DIFFERENT LOCATIONS
PALEOLITHIC PEOPLE
MESOLITHIC PEOPLE
NEOLITHIC PEOPLE
NETWORKS
DIFFERENT TIME
DIFFERENT CULTURE
LANDMASS
RIVERS, STREAMS
AND LAKES
ANIMALS
NATURE
EXTREME
WEATHER
CONDITIONS
VERY INNATE
NATURE
WILD BEASTS
AND ENEMIES
SHELLS
ABUNDANT TREES
AND LANDMASS
CAVES
STONE AND
WOOD
DWELLINGS
PROTECTION
WILD BEATS
AND ENEMIES
SHELTER
WEATHER
CONDITIONS
REFERENCES:
Blinklearning.com
Shoolsprehistory.file.wordpress.com
www.villagedesign.org/vdi
Britannica.com/event/Neolithic-Period
People.okanagan.bc.ca
Google.com