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{{short description|Span of time before recorded history}} | |||
{{For|a timeline of events in the early history of the universe and prehistoric Earth|Timeline of prehistory}} | |||
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{{Human history and prehistory}} | |||
'''Prehistory''', also called '''pre-literary history''',<ref>{{cite journal |date=1973 |title=Prehistory as a Kind of History |jstor=202691 |last1=McCall|first1=Daniel F. |last2=Struever|first2=Stuart |last3=Van Der Merwe|first3=Nicolaas J.|last4=Roe|first4=Derek |journal=] |volume=3 |issue=4 |pages=733–739 |doi=10.2307/202691}}</ref> is the period of ] between the first known use of ]s by ]s {{circa|3.3}} ] and the beginning of ] with the invention of ]s. The use of symbols, marks, and images appears very early among humans, but the earliest known writing systems appeared {{circa|5,200}} years ago. It took thousands of years for writing systems to be widely adopted, with writing having spread to almost all cultures by the 19th century. The end of prehistory therefore came at different times in different places, and the term is less often used in discussing societies where prehistory ended relatively recently. | |||
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|], England, erected by ] peoples ca. 4500-4000 years ago. ] is an important discipline for understanding prehistory.]] | |||
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|{{Human history and prehistory}} | |||
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'''Prehistory''' (], ''præ'' = before, ''historia'' = ]/story) is the period before ]. Archeologist Paul Tournal originally coined the term ''anté-historique''<ref>pre-historic (french)</ref> in describing the finds he had made in the caves of ].<ref>Bruno David, Bryce Barker, Ian J. McNiven (2006). The social archaeology of Australian indigenous societies. Page 55. (cf. "A parallel term anté-historique had earlier been coined by Paul Tournal.")</ref> Thus, the term came into use in France in the 1830s to describe the time before writing, and the word "prehistoric" was later introduced into ] by archeologist ] in 1851.<ref | |||
name="Simpson">{{cite web | |||
|url=http://ads.ahds.ac.uk/catalogue/adsdata/PSAS_2002/pdf/vol_096/96_001_008.pdf | |||
|title=Sir Daniel Wilson and the ''Prehistoric Annals of Scotland'', A Centennial Study | |||
|last=Simpson|first=Douglas|date=1963-11-30 | |||
|work=Proceedings of the Society, 1963-1964 | |||
|accessdate=2009-02-22}}</ref><ref | |||
name="Wilson Scotland"> | |||
{{cite book | |||
|last=Wilson|first=Daniel | |||
|title=The archaeology and prehistoric annals of Scotland | |||
|year=1851|page=xiv}}</ref> | |||
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In the early ], ] in ], the ], and ] were the first civilizations to develop their own scripts and keep historical records, with their neighbours following. Most other civilizations reached their end of prehistory during the following ]. The ] of prehistory into ], ], and ] remains in use for much of ] and ], but is not generally used in those parts of the world where ] arrived abruptly from contact with Eurasian cultures, such as ], ], much of ], and parts of the ]. With some exceptions in ] in the Americas, these areas did not develop complex writing systems before the arrival of Eurasians, so their prehistory reaches into relatively recent periods; for example, 1788 is usually taken as the end of the ]. | |||
The term "prehistory" can be used to refer to all time since the beginning of the ], although it is more often used in referring to the period of time since ] appeared on ], or even more specifically to the time since human-like beings appeared.<ref name="fagan07">Fagan, Brian. 2007. ''World Prehistory: A brief introduction'' New York:Prentice-Hall, Seventh Edition, Chapter One</ref><ref name="renfrew">Renfrew, Colin. 2008. ''Prehistory: The Making of the Human Mind." New York: Modern Library</ref> In dividing up human prehistory, prehistorians typically use the ], whereas scholars of pre-human time periods typically use the ] ] and its internationally defined ] base within the ]. The '''three-age system''' is the ] of ] prehistory into three consecutive ]s, named for their respective predominant tool-making technologies; the ], ], and ]. Another division of history and prehistory can be made between those written events that can be precisely dated by use of a continuous calendar dating from current and those which can't. The loss of continuity of calender date most often occurs when a civilization falls and the language and calendar fall into disuse. We therefore lose the ability to precisely date events written through primary sources to events dated to current calendar dating. | |||
The period when a culture is written about by others, but has not developed its own writing system, is often known as the ] of the culture. By definition,<ref>{{cite web|title=Dictionary Entry|url=http://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/prehistory|access-date=8 August 2017|archive-date=8 August 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170808114821/http://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/prehistory|url-status=live}}</ref> there are no written records from human prehistory, which can only be known from material ] and ] evidence: prehistoric materials and human remains. These were at first understood by the collection of ] and by analogy with pre-literate societies observed in modern times. The key step to understanding prehistoric evidence is dating, and reliable dating techniques have developed steadily since the nineteenth century.<ref>Graslund, Bo. 1987. ''The birth of prehistoric chronology.'' Cambridge:Cambridge University Press.</ref> The most common of these dating techniques is ].<ref>{{Cite web |title=What is Carbon Dating? {{!}} University of Chicago News |url=https://news.uchicago.edu/explainer/what-is-carbon-14-dating#:~:text=Radiocarbon%20dating,%20or%20carbon-14,of%20the%20carbon-14%20isotope. |access-date=2024-10-21 |website=news.uchicago.edu |language=en}}</ref> Further evidence has come from the reconstruction of ]. More recent techniques include forensic chemical analysis to reveal the use and provenance of materials, and genetic analysis of bones to determine kinship and physical characteristics of prehistoric peoples. | |||
The occurrence of ] (and so the beginning of local "historic times") varies generally to cultures classified within either the late Bronze Age or within the Iron Age. Historians increasingly do not restrict themselves to evidence from written records and are coming to rely more upon evidence from the natural and social sciences, thereby blurring the distinction between the terms "history" and "prehistory." {{Citation needed|date=April 2009}} This view has recently been articulated by advocates of ]. | |||
== |
==Definition== | ||
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Because, by definition, there are no written records from human prehistory, dating of prehistoric materials is particularly crucial to the enterprise. Clear techniques for dating were not well-developed until the 19th century.<ref>Graslund, Bo. 1987. ''The birth of prehistoric chronology.'' Cambridge:Cambridge University Press.</ref> | |||
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| caption2 = ], ], {{circa}} 41.000 BP | |||
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| caption3 = ] from ]. ], 43,000–35,000 BC | |||
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], in southeast Turkey, erected for ritual use by early ] people 11,000 years ago]] | |||
] | |||
=== Beginning and end === | |||
The beginning of prehistory is normally taken to be marked by human-like beings appearing on Earth.<ref name="renfrew">Renfrew, Colin. 2008. ''Prehistory: The Making of the Human Mind.'' New York: Modern Library</ref><ref name="fagan07">Fagan, Brian. (2007). ''World Prehistory: A brief introduction'' New York: Prentice-Hall, (Seventh ed.), Chapter One</ref> The date marking its end is typically defined as the advent of the contemporary ] record.<ref>{{Cite book|title=World Prehistory: A brief introduction|last=Fagan|first=Brian|date=2017|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-317-27910-5|edition=Ninth|location=London|page=8|oclc=958480847}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Forsythe |first=Gary |url=https://archive.org/details/criticalhistoryo0000fors/page/12/mode/2up |title=A critical history of early Rome : from prehistory to the first Punic War |date=2005 |publisher=University of California Press |isbn=978-0-520-94029-1 |location=Berkeley |page=12 |oclc=70728478 |url-access=registration}}</ref> | |||
Both dates consequently vary widely from region to region. For example, in ]an regions, prehistory cannot begin before {{Circa|1.3}} million years ago, which is when the first signs of human presence have been found; however, ] and ] contain sites dated as early as {{Circa|2.5}} and 1.8 million years ago, respectively.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Menéndez |first=Mario |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1120111673 |title=Prehistoria de la Península Ibérica: el progreso de la cognición, el mestizaje y las desigualdades durante más de un millón de años |publisher=Alianza Editorial |year=2019 |isbn=978-84-9181-602-7 |location=Madrid |pages=25 |language=es-es |oclc=1120111673}}</ref> Depending on the date when relevant records become a useful academic resource,<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Connah|first=Graham|date=11 May 2007|title=Historical Archaeology in Africa: An Appropriate Concept?|journal=African Archaeological Review|volume=24|issue=1–2|pages=35–40|doi=10.1007/s10437-007-9014-9|s2cid=161120240|issn=0263-0338}}</ref> its end date also varies. For example, in ] it is generally accepted that prehistory ended around 3100 BCE, whereas in ] the end of the prehistoric era is set much more recently, in the 1870s, when the Russian anthropologist ] spent several years living among native peoples, and described their way of life in a comprehensive treatise. In Europe the relatively well-documented classical cultures of ] and ] had neighbouring cultures, including the ]<ref name="auto">{{Cite web|url=https://www.greecehighdefinition.com/blog/2021/2/9/viewing-the-ancient-celts-through-the-lens-of-greece-and-rome|title=Viewing the Ancient Celts through the Lens of Greece and Rome|date=9 February 2021|website=GHD}}</ref> and the ], with little writing.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/etla/hd_etla.htm|title=Etruscan Language and Inscriptions | Essay | The Metropolitan Museum of Art | Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History|first=Authors: Theresa|last=Huntsman|website=The Met’s Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History}}</ref> Historians debate how much weight to give to the sometimes biased accounts in Greek and Roman literature, of these protohistoric cultures.<ref name="auto"/> | |||
=== Time periods === | |||
{{Main|Three-age system|Geologic time scale}} | |||
In dividing up human prehistory in Eurasia, historians typically use the three-age system, whereas scholars of pre-human time periods typically use the ] ] and its internationally defined ] base within the ]. The three-age system is the ] of human prehistory into three consecutive ]s, named for their predominant tool-making technologies: ], ] and ].<ref name="Minds">{{cite book |editor-first=Matthew Daniel |editor-last=Eddy |title=Prehistoric Minds: Human Origins as a Cultural Artefact |date=2011 |publisher=Royal Society of London |url=https://www.academia.edu/3088568 |access-date=19 September 2014 |archive-date=1 April 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210401103717/https://www.academia.edu/3088568/Prehistoric_Minds_Human_Origins_as_a_Cultural_Artefact_1780_2010_London_Royal_Society_of_London_2011_ |url-status=live }}</ref> In some areas, there is also a transition period between Stone Age and Bronze Age, the ] or Copper Age.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Chalcolithic {{!}} British Museum |url=https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/term/x13740 |access-date=6 March 2023 |archive-date=6 March 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230306184555/https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/term/x13740 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
For the prehistory of the Americas see ]. | |||
===History of the term=== | |||
The notion of "prehistory" emerged during the Enlightenment in the work of antiquarians who used the word "primitive" to describe societies that existed before written records.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Eddy |first=Matthew Daniel |title=The Line of Reason: Hugh Blair, Spatiality and the Progressive Structure of Language |journal=Notes and Records of the Royal Society |year=2011 |volume=65 |pages=9–24 |url=https://www.academia.edu/1112084 |doi=10.1098/rsnr.2010.0098 |s2cid=190700715 |access-date=2 February 2014 |archive-date=1 April 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210401103717/https://www.academia.edu/1112084/_The_Line_of_Reason_Hugh_Blair_Spatiality_and_the_Progressive_Structure_of_Language_Notes_and_Records_of_the_Royal_Society_65_2011_9_24 |url-status=live }}</ref> The word "prehistory" first appeared in English in 1836 in the ''Foreign ]''.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Eddy|first=Matthew Daniel|title=The Prehistoric Mind as a Historical Artefact|journal=Notes and Records of the Royal Society|year=2011|volume=65|pages=1–8|url=https://www.academia.edu/1130650|doi=10.1098/rsnr.2010.0097|doi-access=free|access-date=2 February 2014|archive-date=1 April 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210401103717/https://www.academia.edu/1130650/The_Prehistoric_Mind_as_a_Historical_Artefact_Notes_and_Records_of_the_Royal_Society_65_2011_1_8|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
The geologic time scale for pre-human time periods, and the ] for human prehistory, were systematised during the nineteenth century in the work of British, French, German, and Scandinavian ], ], and ]s.<ref name=Invention> | |||
{{cite book | |||
|title=The Invention of Prehistory: Empire, Violence, and Our Obsession with Human Origins | |||
|first=Stefanos | |||
|last=Geroulanos | |||
|date=2024 | |||
|publisher=] | |||
|location=New York | |||
|chapter=Chapter 4: Humanity, Divided by Three | |||
|pages=63–72 | |||
|url={{GBurl|qQjHEAAAQBAJ|p=1845}} | |||
|isbn=978-1-324-09145-5 | |||
}} .</ref><ref name="Minds"/> | |||
==Means of research== | |||
The primary researchers into ] prehistory are prehistoric ] and physical ] who use excavation, geologic and geographic surveys, and other scientific analysis to reveal and interpret the nature and behavior of pre-literate and non-literate peoples.<ref name="fagan07"/> Human population ] and historical ] are also providing valuable insight for these questions.<ref name="renfrew"/> Cultural anthropologists help to provide context of marriage{{clarify|date=April 2011|reason=how can marriage be proven among pre-historic people without documentation?}} and trade, by which objects of human origin are passed among people, thereby allowing for a rich analysis of any article that arises in a human prehistoric context.<ref name="renfrew"/> Therefore, data about prehistory is provided by a wide variety of natural and social sciences, such as ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ] and many others. | |||
The main source of information for prehistory is archaeology (a branch of anthropology), but some scholars are beginning to make more use of evidence from the natural and social sciences.<ref name="Iberia">The Prehistory of Iberia: Debating Early Social Stratification and the State edited by María Cruz Berrocal, Leonardo García Sanjuán, Antonio Gilman. Pg 36.</ref><ref name="Edge">''Historical Archaeology: Back from the Edge''. Edited by Pedro Paulo A. Funari, Martin Hall, Sian Jones. p. 8.ISBN 9780415518888</ref><ref name="Pal">''Through the Ages in Palestinian Archaeology: An Introductory Handbook''. By Walter E. Ras. p. 49.ISBN 9781563380556</ref> | |||
The primary researchers into human prehistory are archaeologists and ] who use excavation, geologic and geographic surveys, and other scientific analysis to reveal and interpret the nature and behavior of pre-literate and non-literate peoples.<ref name="fagan07"/> Human population ] and ] are also providing valuable insight.<ref name="renfrew"/> Cultural anthropologists help provide context for societal interactions, by which objects of human origin pass among people, allowing an analysis of any article that arises in a human prehistoric context.<ref name="renfrew"/> Therefore, data about prehistory is provided by a wide variety of natural and social sciences, such as ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and many others. | |||
Human prehistory differs from history not only in terms of its ] but in the way it deals with the activities of ]s rather than named ]s or ]s. Restricted to material processes, remains and artifacts rather than written records, prehistory is anonymous. Because of this, the reference terms used by prehistorians such as ] or ] are modern labels, the precise definition of which is often subject to discussion and argument. | |||
Human prehistory differs from history not only in terms of its ], but in the way it deals with the activities of ]s rather than named ]s or ]s. Restricted to material processes, remains, and artefacts rather than written records, prehistory is anonymous. Because of this, reference terms that prehistorians use, such as "]" or "]", are modern labels with definitions sometimes subject to debate. | |||
The date marking the end of prehistory, that is the date when ] records become a useful academic resource, varies from region to region. For example, in ] it is generally accepted that prehistory ended around 3200 ], whereas in ] the end of the prehistoric era is set much more recently, at around 1900 ]. | |||
== Stone Age == | == Stone Age == | ||
{{Main|Stone Age}} | |||
=== Paleolithic age === | |||
The concept of a "Stone Age" is found useful in the archaeology of most of the world, although in the ] it is called by different names and begins with a ], or sometimes ]. The sub-divisions described below are used for Eurasia, and not consistently across the whole area. | |||
{{Main|Paleolithic|Recent African origin of modern humans|Archaic Homo sapiens|Early human migrations}} | |||
], according to ] ]. Numbers are ] before the present (accuracy disputed).]] | |||
"Paleolithic" means "Old Stone Age," and begins with the first use of stone tools. The Paleolithic is the earliest period of the ]. | |||
=== Palaeolithic === | |||
The early part of the Paleolithic age is called the ], which predates '']'', beginning with '']'' (and related species) and with the earliest stone tools, dated to around 2.5 million years ago.{{Citation needed|date=April 2009}} | |||
]'' (yellow), {{color box|#e4ca30}} '']'' (ochre) during '']'' and {{color box|#e9252c}} '']'' (red, '']''), with the numbers of years since they appeared '']''.]] | |||
] originated some 200,000 years ago, ushering in the ]. Anatomic changes indicating modern language capacity also arise during the Middle Paleolithic.{{Citation needed|reason=date-April 2009|date=April 2009}} The systematic ], the ], ], and the use of increasingly sophisticated multi-part tools are highlights of the Middle Paleolithic. | |||
"Palaeolithic" means "Old Stone Age", and begins with the first use of ]s. The Paleolithic is the earliest period of the ]. It extends from the earliest known use of stone tools by ] {{circa|3.3}} million years ago, to the end of the ] {{circa|11,650}} ] (before the present period).<ref name="Thoth&Schick">{{cite book |chapter= Overview of Paleolithic Anthropology | doi= 10.1007/978-3-540-33761-4_64 |title= Handbook of Paleoanthropology|pages= 1943–1963|year= 2007 |last1= Toth |first1= Nicholas |last2= Schick |first2= Kathy |isbn= 978-3-540-32474-4 |editor1-last= Henke |editor1-first= H. C. Winfried |editor2-last= Hardt |editor2-first= Thorolf |editor3-last= Tatersall |editor3-first= Ian |volume= 3 |location= Berlin; Heidelberg; New York |publisher= Springer }}</ref> | |||
Throughout the Paleolithic, humans generally lived as ]ic ]s. ] tended to be very small and egalitarian{{citation needed|date=March 2011}}, though hunter-gatherer societies with abundant resources or advanced food-storage techniques sometimes developed sedentary lifestyles with complex social structures such as chiefdoms, and ]. Long-distance contacts may have been established, as in the case of ] "highways." | |||
The early part of the Palaeolithic is called the ] (as in excavations it appears underneath the Upper Paleolithic), beginning with the earliest stone tools dated to around 3.3 million years ago at the ] site in Kenya.<ref name="Harmand">{{cite journal|last1=Harmand|first1=Sonia|title=3.3-million-year-old stone tools from Lomekwi 3, West Turkana, Kenya|journal=Nature|date=2015|volume=521|issue=7552|pages=310–315|doi=10.1038/nature14464|display-authors=etal|pmid=25993961|bibcode=2015Natur.521..310H|s2cid=1207285|url=https://academiccommons.columbia.edu/doi/10.7916/D8697F75/download|access-date=31 May 2022|archive-date=9 October 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211009162117/https://academiccommons.columbia.edu/doi/10.7916/D8697F75/download|url-status=live}}</ref> These tools predate the genus ''Homo'' and were probably used by '']''.<ref>Harmand et al., 2015, p. 315.</ref> Evidence of ] by early hominins during the Lower Palaeolithic Era is uncertain and has at best limited scholarly support. The most widely accepted claim is that ''H. erectus'' or '']'' made fires between 790,000 and 690,000 BP in a site at ], ]. The use of fire enabled early humans to cook food, provide warmth, have a light source, deter animals at night and meditate.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.sapiens.org/archaeology/early-human-fire-natural-environment/|title=How Early Humans Shaped the World With Fire|date=28 May 2021|website=SAPIENS}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/fire-good-make-human-inspiration-happen-132494650/|title=Fire Good. Make Human Inspiration Happen.|first=Smithsonian|last=Magazine|website=Smithsonian Magazine}}</ref> | |||
=== Mesolithic age === | |||
{{Main|Mesolithic}} | |||
]]] | |||
The "Mesolithic age," or "Middle Stone Age" (from the ] "''mesos''," "middle," and "''lithos''," "stone") was the period in the development of ] ] between the Paleolithic and ] periods of the Stone Age. | |||
] originated some 300,000 years ago,<ref name="Irhoud">{{cite journal | vauthors = Hublin JJ, Ben-Ncer A, Bailey SE, Freidline SE, Neubauer S, Skinner MM, Bergmann I, Le Cabec A, Benazzi S, Harvati K, Gunz P | display-authors = 6 | title = New fossils from Jebel Irhoud, Morocco and the pan-African origin of Homo sapiens | journal = Nature | volume = 546 | issue = 7657 | pages = 289–292 | date = June 2017 | pmid = 28593953 | doi = 10.1038/nature22336 | bibcode = 2017Natur.546..289H | s2cid = 256771372 | url = https://kar.kent.ac.uk/62267/1/Submission_288356_1_art_file_2637492_j96j1b.pdf | access-date = 27 July 2022 | archive-date = 8 January 2020 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20200108234003/https://kar.kent.ac.uk/62267/1/Submission_288356_1_art_file_2637492_j96j1b.pdf | url-status = live }}</ref> ushering in the ]. Anatomic changes indicating modern language capacity also arise during the Middle Palaeolithic.<ref>Race and Human Evolution. By Milford H. Wolpoff. p. 348.</ref> During the Middle Palaeolithic Era, there is the first definitive evidence of human use of fire. Sites in Zambia have charred logs, charcoal and carbonized plants, that have been dated to 180,000 BP.<ref>{{cite journal|last=James|first=Steven R.|date=February 1989|title=Hominid Use of Fire in the Lower and Middle Pleistocene: A Review of the Evidence|url=http://faculty.ksu.edu.sa/archaeology/Publications/Hearths/Hominid%20Use%20of%20Fire%20in%20the%20Lower%20and%20Middle%20Pleistocene.pdf|journal=Current Anthropology|volume=30|issue=1|pages=1–26|doi=10.1086/203705|s2cid=146473957|access-date=4 April 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151212084645/http://faculty.ksu.edu.sa/archaeology/Publications/Hearths/Hominid%20Use%20of%20Fire%20in%20the%20Lower%20and%20Middle%20Pleistocene.pdf|archive-date=12 December 2015|url-status=dead}}</ref> The systematic ], ], ], and the use of increasingly sophisticated multi-part tools are highlights of the Middle Paleolithic. | |||
The Mesolithic period began at the end of the ] epoch, some 10,000 BP, and ended with ], the date of which varied by geographic region. In some areas, such as the ], agriculture was already underway by the end of the ], and there the Mesolithic is short and poorly defined. In areas with limited ] impact, the term "]" is sometimes preferred. | |||
The ] extends from 50,000 and 12,000 years ago, with the first organized settlements and blossoming of artistic work. | |||
Regions that experienced greater environmental effects as the ] ended have a much more evident Mesolithic era, lasting millennia. In ], societies were able to live well on rich food supplies from the marshlands fostered by the warmer climate. Such conditions produced distinctive human behaviours which are preserved in the material record, such as the ] and ] cultures. These conditions also delayed the coming of the Neolithic until as late as 4000 ] (6,000 ]) in northern Europe. | |||
Throughout the Palaeolithic, humans generally lived as ]ic ]s. ] tended to be very small and egalitarian,<ref>Vanishing Voices : The Extinction of the World's Languages. By Daniel Nettle, Suzanne Romaine Merton Professor of English Language University of Oxford. pp. 102–103.</ref> although hunter-gatherer societies with abundant resources or advanced food-storage techniques sometimes developed sedentary lifestyles with complex social structures such as chiefdoms,<ref>{{Cite journal|title=Chiefdoms|journal=Current Anthropology|volume=30|issue=1|pages=84–88|jstor = 2743311|last1 = Earle|first1 = Timothy|year=1989|doi=10.1086/203717|s2cid=145014800}}</ref> and ]. Long-distance contacts may have been established, as in the case of ] "highways" known as ].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/allinthemind/songlines-indigenous-memory-code/7581788|title=Songlines: the Indigenous memory code|date=8 July 2016|website=Radio National|language=en-AU|access-date=18 February 2019|archive-date=21 December 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181221042151/https://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/allinthemind/songlines-indigenous-memory-code/7581788|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
Remains from this period are few and far between, often limited to ]s. In ]ed areas, the first signs of ] have been found, although this would only begin in earnest during the Neolithic, when more space was needed for ]. | |||
=== Mesolithic === | |||
The Mesolithic age is characterized in most areas by small composite ] tools — ]s and ]s. ], stone ]s and wooden objects, e.g. ]s and ], have been found at some sites. These technologies first occur in ], associated with the ] cultures, before spreading to ] through the ] culture of Northern Africa and the ] culture of the ]. Independent discovery is not always ruled out. | |||
]]] | |||
The Mesolithic, or Middle Stone Age (from the ] ''mesos'', 'middle', and ''lithos'', 'stone'), was a period in the development of human ] between the Palaeolithic and ]. | |||
The ] period began with the retreat of glaciers at the end of the ] epoch, some 10,000 BP, and ended with ], the date of which varied by geographic region. In some areas, such as the ], agriculture was already underway by the end of the ], and there the Mesolithic is short and poorly defined. In areas with limited ] impact, the term "]" is preferred.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://glosbe.com/en/en/Epipalaeolithic|title=Epipalaeolithic|website=glosbe.com}}</ref> | |||
Although Mesolithic culture is normally associated with '']'', there were other groups of humans alive at the same time, such as Neanderthals, and it is not sure that all mesolithic remains belong to ''Homo Sapiens''.{{Citation needed|date=March 2011}} | |||
Regions that experienced greater environmental effects as the ] ended have a much more evident Mesolithic era, lasting millennia. In ], societies were able to live well on rich food supplies from the ]lands fostered by the warmer climate. Such conditions produced distinctive human behaviours that are preserved in the material record, such as the ] and ] cultures. These conditions also delayed the coming of the Neolithic until as late as 4000 BCE (6,000 ]) in northern Europe. | |||
=== Neolithic age === | |||
{{Main|Neolithic}} | |||
] temple complex of ], ]<ref>http://www.heritagemalta.org/hagarqim.html</ref>]] | |||
Remains from this period are few and far between, often limited to ]s. In forested areas, the first signs of ] have been found, although this would only begin in earnest during the Neolithic, when more space was needed for ]. | |||
"Neolithic" means "New Stone Age." This was a period of primitive ] and ] development, toward the end of the "]." The Neolithic period saw the development of early ]s, ], ] ], ]s and the onset of the earliest recorded incidents of warfare.<ref></ref> The ''Neolithic'' term is commonly used in the ], as its application to cultures in the ] and ] that did not fully develop metal-working technology raises problems. | |||
The Mesolithic is characterized in most areas by small composite ] tools: ]s and ]s. ], stone ]s, and wooden objects such as ]s and ] have been found at some sites. These technologies first occur in Africa, associated with the Azilian cultures, before spreading to Europe through the ] culture of Northern Africa and the ] culture of the ]. However, independent discovery is not ruled out. | |||
==== Agriculture ==== | |||
{{Main|History of agriculture}} | |||
A major change, described by prehistorian ] as the "]," occurred about the 10th millennium BC with ]. The ] first began farming c. 9500 BC. By 7000 BC, agriculture had been developed in ] and ] separately; by 6000 BC, to Egypt; by 5000 BC, to China. About 2700 BC, agriculture had come to ]. | |||
=== Neolithic === | |||
Although attention has tended to concentrate on the ]'s ], archaeology in the ], ] and ] indicates that agricultural systems, using different crops and animals, may in some cases have developed there nearly as early. The development of organised ], and the use of a specialised ], by the ], began about 5500 BC. Stone was supplanted by bronze and iron in implements of agriculture and warfare. Agricultural settlements had until then been almost completely dependent on ] tools. In ], ] and ] tools, decorations and weapons began to be commonplace about 3000 BC. After bronze, the Eastern ] region, ] and ] saw the introduction of ] tools and weapons. | |||
], ], 3900 BCE<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.heritagemalta.org/hagarqim.html |title=Hagarqim « Heritage Malta |access-date=20 February 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090203124226/http://www.heritagemalta.org/hagarqim.html |archive-date=3 February 2009 }}</ref>]] | |||
[[Image:World 1000 BCE.png|thumb|right|300px|The technological and social state of the world, circa 1000 BC. | |||
] | |||
{{legend|#F9ED25|]s}} | |||
"Neolithic" means "New Stone Age", from about 10,200 BCE in some parts of the Middle East, but later in other parts of the world,<ref name="Bellwood">''First Farmers: The Origins of Agricultural Societies'' by ], 2004</ref> and ended between 4,500 and 2,000 BCE. Although there were several species of humans during the ], by the ] only '']'' remained.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.worldmuseumofman.org/neolithic.php |title=World Museum of Man: Neolithic / Chalcolithic Period |publisher=World Museum of Man |access-date=21 August 2013 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131208211912/http://www.worldmuseumofman.org/neolithic.php |archive-date=8 December 2013 }}</ref> This was a period of ] and ] developments which established most of the basic elements of historical cultures, such as the domestication of crops and ], and the establishment of permanent settlements and early chiefdoms. The era commenced with the beginning of ], which produced the "]". It ended when metal tools became widespread (in the ] or ]; or, in some geographical regions, in the ]). The term ''Neolithic'' is commonly used in the ]; its application to cultures in the ] and ] is complicated by the fact standard progression from stone to metal tools, as seen in the Old World, does not neatly apply.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.britannica.com/event/Stone-Age/The-Americas | title=Stone Age - Prehistoric Americas, Tools, Artifacts | Britannica }}</ref> | |||
{{legend|#9A7199|] ]}} | |||
{{legend|#90AD27|]}} | |||
{{legend|#F79321|]}} | |||
{{legend|#1072BA|]}} | |||
{{legend|#FFFFFF|uninhabited}}]] | |||
The Americas may not have had metal tools until the ] horizon (900 BC). The ] did have metal armor, knives and tableware. Even the metal-poor ] had metal-tipped plows, at least after the conquest of ]. However, little archaeological research has so far been done in ], and nearly all the '']'' (recording devices, in the form of knots, used by the Incas) were burned in the ]. As late as 2004, entire ] were still being unearthed. | |||
Early Neolithic farming was limited to a narrow range of plants, both wild and domesticated, which included ], ] and ], and the keeping of ], ], and ]. By about 6,900–6,400 BCE, it included domesticated ] and pigs, the establishment of permanently or seasonally inhabited settlements, and the use of ]. The Neolithic period saw the development of early ]s, ], animal ], ]s, and the onset of the earliest recorded incidents of warfare.<ref>{{Cite journal|url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/european-journal-of-archaeology/article/abs/isotopic-evidence-for-mobility-and-group-organization-among-neolithic-farmers-at-talheim-germany-5000-bc/D91669D981DAB6903C9E99289ABAC6E2|title=Isotopic evidence for mobility and group organization among Neolithic farmers at Talheim, Germany, 5000 BC|last1=Price|first1= TD|last2= Wahl |first2=J|last3= Bentley|first3= RA|journal= European Journal of Archaeology|year= 2006|volume=9|issue=2–3|pages=259–284 | doi=10.1177/1461957107086126|s2cid=162580508 }}</ref> | |||
The cradles of early ]s were ] ]s, such as the ] and ] valleys in ], the ] valley in ], the ] valley in the ], and the ] and ] valleys in ]. Some nomadic peoples, such as the Indigenous Australians and the ] of southern Africa, did not practice agriculture until relatively recent times. | |||
], Italy, 3500 BCE]] | |||
Agriculture made possible complex societies — ]. States and markets emerged. Technologies enhanced people's ability to harness ] and to develop ] and ]. | |||
Settlements became more permanent, some with circular houses made of ] with a single room. Settlements might have a surrounding stone wall to keep domesticated animals in and hostile tribes out. Later settlements have rectangular mud-brick houses where the family lived in single or multiple rooms. Burial findings suggest an ] with ] of the dead. The ] may have created the earliest system of writing.<ref>{{cite book|title = Pre-writing in Southeastern Europe: The Sign System of the Vinča Culture ca. 4000 BC|last = Winn|first = Shan|publisher = Western Publishers|year = 1981|location = Calgary}}</ref> The ]ic temple complexes of ] are notable for their gigantic structures. Although some late Eurasian Neolithic societies formed complex stratified chiefdoms or even states, states evolved in Eurasia only with the rise of metallurgy, and most Neolithic societies on the whole were relatively simple and egalitarian.<ref name="Leonard D. Katz Rigby 2000 352">{{cite book| author = Leonard D. Katz Rigby| author2 = S. Stephen Henry Rigby| title = Evolutionary Origins of Morality: Cross-disciplinary Perspectives| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=6wFHth05xkoC&pg=PA158| year = 2000| publisher = Imprint Academic| location = United kingdom| isbn = 978-0-7190-5612-3| page = 158| access-date = 22 August 2020| archive-date = 1 April 2021| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210401103747/https://books.google.com/books?id=6wFHth05xkoC&pg=PA158| url-status = live}}</ref> Most clothing appears to have been made of animal skins, as indicated by finds of large numbers of bone and antler pins which are ideal for fastening leather. ] cloth and ] might have become available during the later Neolithic,<ref>{{Cite journal|url = https://www.academia.edu/203730|title = Smooth and Cool, or Warm and Soft: Investigatingthe Properties of Cloth in Prehistory|last = Harris|first = Susanna|year = 2009|website = North European Symposium for Archaeological Textiles X|access-date = 5 September 2013|publisher = Academia.edu|archive-date = 1 April 2021|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210401103719/https://www.academia.edu/203730/Smooth_and_cool_or_warm_and_soft_investigating_the_properties_of_cloth_in_prehistory_In_E_Andersson_Strand_M_Gleba_U_Mannering_C_Munkholt_M_Ringgaard_eds_North_European_Symposium_for_Archaeological_Textiles_X_Oxford_Oxbow_Books_Ancient_Textiles_Series_5_pp_140_112|url-status = live}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mitchellteachers.org/WorldHistory/MrMEarlyHumansProject/PDFs/PaleolithictoNeolithicDescriptions.pdf |title=Aspects of Life During the Neolithic Period |access-date=5 September 2013 |publisher=Teachers' Curriculum Institute |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160505105137/http://www.mitchellteachers.org/WorldHistory/MrMEarlyHumansProject/PDFs/PaleolithictoNeolithicDescriptions.pdf |archive-date=5 May 2016 }}</ref> as suggested by finds of perforated stones that (depending on size) may have served as ] or ] weights.<ref>{{Cite journal|url = https://www.academia.edu/1587878|title = Pierced clay disks and Late Neolithic textile production|publisher = Academia.org|last = Gibbs|first = Kevin T.|access-date = 5 September 2013|year = 2006|website = Proceedings of the 5th International Congress on the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East|archive-date = 1 April 2021|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210401103719/https://www.academia.edu/1587878/Pierced_clay_disks_and_Late_Neolithic_textile_production_Gibbs_2008_|url-status = live}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|title=Unraveling the Enigma of the Bi: The Spindle Whorl as the Model of the Ritual Disk |year=1993 |url=http://scholarspace.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/handle/10125/17022/?sequence=1 |last=Green |first=Jean M |journal=Asian Perspectives |issue=1 |volume=32 |pages=105–124 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150211201745/http://scholarspace.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/handle/10125/17022/?sequence=1 |archive-date=11 February 2015 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|title = The clay loom weight, in: Early Neolithic ritual activity, Bronze Age occupation and medieval activity at Pitlethie Road, Leuchars, Fife|year = 2007|journal = Tayside and Fife Archaeological Journal|last = Cook|first = M|volume = 13|pages = 1–23}}</ref> | |||
== |
== Chalcolithic == | ||
{{Main|Chalcolithic}} | {{Main|Chalcolithic}} | ||
], ]]] | |||
In Old World archaeology, the "Chalcolithic", "Eneolithic" or "Copper Age" refers to a transitional period where early ] metallurgy appeared alongside the widespread use of stone tools. | |||
In Old World archaeology, the "Chalcolithic", "Eneolithic", or "Copper Age" refers to a transitional period where early ] metallurgy appeared alongside the widespread use of stone tools. During this period, some weapons and tools were made of copper. This period was still largely Neolithic in character. It is a phase of the ] before it was discovered that adding ] to ] formed the harder ]. The Copper Age is seen as a transition period between the Stone Age and Bronze Age.<ref>{{ cite web | url= https://study.com/academy/lesson/copper-age-history.html | title = Copper Age / Chalcolithic Age |author1=Sasha Blakeley|author2= Christopher Muscato|website = Study.com | date= 2023 | url-access= subscription}}</ref> | |||
], ], ]]] | |||
An archaeological site in ] contains the oldest securely dated evidence of copper making at high temperature, from 7,500 years ago. The find in 2010 extends the known record of copper ] by about 800 years, and suggests that copper smelting may have been invented independently in separate parts of Asia and Europe at that time, rather than spreading from a single source.<ref name="archaeology.ws">{{cite web|title=Serbian site may have hosted first copper makers|date=17 July 2010|work=ScienceNews|url=http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/60563/description/Serbian_site_may_have_hosted_first_copper_makers|access-date=28 October 2015|archive-date=8 May 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130508005006/http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/60563/description/Serbian_site_may_have_hosted_first_copper_makers|url-status=live}}</ref> The emergence of ] may have occurred first in the ], where it gave rise to the Bronze Age in the ] (the traditional view), although finds from the ] in Europe have now been securely dated to slightly earlier than those of the Fertile Crescent. ] contains evidence of copper mining 7,000 years ago.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://biblical-archaeology.org/en/locations/%d7%aa%d7%9e%d7%a0%d7%a2/|title=Timna |website=Biblical Archaeology – Maps and Findings}}</ref> The process of transition from ] to Chalcolithic in the Middle East is characterized in archaeological stone tool assemblages by a decline in high quality raw material procurement and use. North Africa and the Nile Valley imported its iron technology from the ] and followed the Near Eastern course of Bronze Age and ] development. | |||
== Bronze Age == | == Bronze Age == | ||
{{Main|Bronze Age}} | {{Main|Bronze Age}} | ||
]-drawn ], accompanied by script, ], {{Circa|1200 BCE}}]] | |||
The Bronze Age is the earliest period in which some civilizations reached the end of prehistory, by introducing written records. The Bronze Age, or parts thereof, are thus considered to be part of prehistory only for the regions and civilizations who developed a system of keeping written records during later periods. The ] coincides in some areas with the beginnings of the Bronze Age. After the appearance of writing, people started creating texts including written records of administrative matters.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://magazine.uchicago.edu/1102/features/the_origins_of_writing.shtml|title=The University of Chicago Magazine: Features|website=magazine.uchicago.edu}}</ref> | |||
]-drawn ], ], ca. 1200 BC.]] | |||
The term '''Bronze Age''' refers to a period in human cultural development when the most advanced ] (at least in systematic and widespread use) included techniques for ] ] and ] from naturally occurring outcroppings of copper ores, and then smelting those ores to cast ]. These naturally occurring ores typically included arsenic as a common impurity. Copper/tin ores are rare, as reflected in the fact that there were no tin bronzes in Western Asia before 3000 BC. The Bronze Age forms part of the ] for prehistoric societies. In this system, it follows the ] in some areas of the world. | |||
The Bronze Age refers to a period in human cultural development when the most advanced ] (at least in systematic and widespread use) included techniques for smelting copper and ] from naturally occurring outcroppings of ores, and then combining them to cast ]. These naturally occurring ores typically included ] as a common impurity. Tin ores are rare, as reflected in the fact there were no tin bronzes in ] before 3000 BCE. The Bronze Age forms part of the three-age system for prehistoric societies.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/three-age-system|title=Three-age system | archaeology | Britannica|website=www.britannica.com}}</ref> In this system, it follows the ] in some areas of the world. | |||
The Bronze Age is the earliest period of which we have direct written accounts, since the invention of ] coincides with its early beginnings.{{Citation needed|date=May 2009}} | |||
While copper is a common ore, deposits of tin are rare in the ], and often had to be traded or carried considerable distances from the few mines, stimulating the creation of extensive trading routes. In many areas as far apart as China and England, the valuable new material was used for weapons, but for a long time apparently not available for agricultural tools. Much of it seems to have been hoarded by social elites, and sometimes deposited in extravagant quantities, from ]s and ], to European ]s of unused axe-heads. | |||
By the end of the Bronze Age large states, whose armies imposed themselves on people with a different culture, and are often called empires, had arisen in Egypt, China, ] (the ]), and ], all of them literate. | |||
== Iron Age == | == Iron Age == | ||
{{Main|Iron Age|Classical antiquity}} | {{Further|Protohistory|Ancient history}}{{Main|Iron Age|Classical antiquity}} | ||
The Iron Age is not part of prehistory for all civilizations who had introduced written records during the Bronze Age. Most remaining civilizations did so during the Iron Age, often through conquest by empires, which continued to expand during this period. For example, in most of Europe conquest by the ] means the term Iron Age is replaced by "Roman", "]", and similar terms after the conquest. Even before conquest, many areas began to have a protohistory, as they were written about by literate cultures; the ] is an example. | |||
In archaeology, the Iron Age refers to the advent of ]. The adoption of ] coincided with other changes, often including more sophisticated agricultural practices, religious beliefs and artistic styles, which makes the archaeological Iron Age coincide with the "]" in the history of philosophy. Although iron ore is common, the metalworking techniques necessary to use iron are different from those needed for the metal used earlier, more heat is required.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://omeka.uottawa.ca/museumclassicalantiquities/exhibits/show/extended-artefact-features/bronze-and-iron|title=Bronze and Iron: A Comparison · Extended Artefact Features · Museum of Classical Antiquities, University of Ottawa|website=omeka.uottawa.ca}}</ref> Once the technical challenge had been solved, iron replaced bronze as its higher abundance meant armies could be armed much more easily with iron weapons.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.e-education.psu.edu/matse81/node/2129|title=Why Did it Take So Long Between the Bronze Age and the Iron Age? | MATSE 81: Materials In Today's World|website=www.e-education.psu.edu}}</ref> | |||
== Timeline == | |||
{{Human timeline}} | |||
{{Further|Timeline of human evolution|Timeline of prehistory}} | |||
All dates are approximate and conjectural, obtained through research in the fields of ], archaeology, ], ], or ]. They are all subject to revision due to new discoveries or improved calculations. BP stands for "] (1950)." BCE stands for "]". | |||
===Paleolithic=== | |||
In ], the '''Iron Age''' refers to the advent of ]. The adoption of ] coincided with other changes in some past cultures, often including more sophisticated agricultural practices, religious beliefs and artistic styles, which makes the archaeological Iron Age coincide with the "]" in the history of philosophy. | |||
; ] | |||
== Timeline of human prehistory == | |||
* c. 3.3 million BP – Earliest stone tools<ref name="Harmand"/> | |||
{{See|Timeline of human evolution|Timeline of the Stone Age}} | |||
* c. 2.8 million BP – Genus '']'' appears | |||
* c. 600,000 BP – ] | |||
* c. 400,000 BP – ] | |||
; ] | |||
All dates are approximate and conjectural, obtained through research in the fields of ], ], ], ], or ]. They are all subject to revision due to new discoveries or improved calculations. ] stands for "]." | |||
* c. 300,000 BP – ] ''(])'' appear in Africa,<ref name="Irhoud"/> one of whose characteristics is a lack of significant body hair compared to other primates. See ]. | |||
; Lower and ] | |||
* c. 300,000–30,000 BP – ] (]) culture in Europe.<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Shea | first1 = J.J. | year = 2003 | title = Neanderthals, competition and the origin of modern human behaviour in the Levant | journal = Evolutionary Anthropology | volume = 12 | issue = 4| pages = 173–187 | doi = 10.1002/evan.10101 | s2cid = 86608040 }}</ref> | |||
* c. 200,000 BP - Anatomically modern ] appear in Africa. | |||
* c. 170,000–83,000 BP – Invention of ]<ref>{{cite journal| title= Origin of Clothing Lice Indicates Early Clothing Use by Anatomically Modern Humans in Africa| journal= Molecular Biology and Evolution| volume= 28| issue= 1| pages= 29–32| date= September 2010| url= http://mbe.oxfordjournals.org/content/28/1/29.full| doi= 10.1093/molbev/msq234| pmid= 20823373| pmc= 3002236| last1= Toups| first1= M.A.| last2= Kitchen| first2= A.| last3= Light| first3= J.E.| last4= Reed| first4= D. L.| archive-date= 14 January 2017| archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20170114190159/http://mbe.oxfordjournals.org/content/28/1/29.full| url-status= live}}</ref> | |||
* c. 300,000 BP to 30,000 BP. ] (]) culture in ].<ref>Shea, J. J. 2003. Neanderthals, competition and the origin of modern human behaviour in the Levant. ''Evolutionary Anthropology'' 12: 173-187.</ref> | |||
* c. 75,000 BP |
* c. 75,000 BP – ] supereruption.<ref>{{cite news | first=Tim | last=Jones | title=Mount Toba Eruption – Ancient Humans Unscathed, Study Claims | date=6 July 2007 | url=http://anthropology.net/2007/07/06/mount-toba-eruption-ancient-humans-unscathed-study-claims/ | work=Anthropology.net | access-date=20 April 2008 | archive-date=8 July 2018 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180708135026/https://anthropology.net/2007/07/06/mount-toba-eruption-ancient-humans-unscathed-study-claims/ | url-status=live }}</ref> | ||
* c. |
* c. 80,000–50,000 BP – '']'' exit Africa as a single population.<ref name="NYT-20160921">{{cite news |last=Zimmer |first=Carl |author-link=Carl Zimmer |title=How We Got Here: DNA Points to a Single Migration From Africa |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2016/09/22/science/ancient-dna-human-history.html |date=21 September 2016 |work=] |access-date=22 September 2016 |archive-date=2 May 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190502133043/https://www.nytimes.com/2016/09/22/science/ancient-dna-human-history.html |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="traces">This is indicated by the M130 marker in the ]. "Traces of a Distant Past", by Gary Stix, ''Scientific American'', July 2008, pp. 56–63.</ref> In the next millennia, descendants from this population migrate to southern ], ], ], ], China, ], ], and the northwestern coast of North America.<ref name="traces"/> | ||
* c. 80,000–50,000? BP – ], by this point including ] and sophisticated cognition | |||
;] | ;] | ||
* c. |
* c. 45,000 BP / 43,000 BCE – Beginnings of ] culture in France. | ||
* c. 43,000 BP - 37,000 BP The ] culture began, for example in the German ] | |||
* c. 30,000 BP / 28,000 BC - A herd of ] is slaughtered and butchered by humans in the Vezere Valley in what is today ].<ref>Gene S. Stuart, "Ice Age Hunters: Artists in Hidden Cages." In ''Mysteries of the Ancient World'', a publication of the National Geographic Society, 1979. Pages 11-18.</ref> | |||
* c. 40,000 BP / 38,000 BCE – First human settlement in the ], by ]s (including the future sites of ],<ref name="Settlers' history rewritten">{{cite news|last=Macey|first=Richard|date=2007|url=http://www.smh.com.au/news/national/settlers-history-rewritten/2007/09/14/1189276983698.html|title=Settlers' history rewritten: go back 30,000 years|work=The Sydney Morning Herald|access-date=5 July 2014|archive-date=2 July 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180702180036/https://www.smh.com.au/news/national/settlers-history-rewritten/2007/09/14/1189276983698.html|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="Aboriginal people and place">{{cite web|publisher=Sydney Barani|date=2013|url=http://www.sydneybarani.com.au/sites/aboriginal-people-and-place/|title=Aboriginal people and place|access-date=5 July 2014|archive-date=8 February 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140208083531/http://www.sydneybarani.com.au/sites/aboriginal-people-and-place/|url-status=live}}</ref> ],<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.archaeology.arts.uwa.edu.au/staff/bowdler__research_interests/the_pleistocene_pacific |title=The Pleistocene Pacific |author=Sandra Bowdler |work=Published in 'Human settlement', in D. Denoon (ed) The Cambridge History of the Pacific Islanders. pp. 41–50. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge |publisher=] |access-date=26 February 2008|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080216181223/http://www.archaeology.arts.uwa.edu.au/about/research/bowdler__research_interests/the_pleistocene_pacific |archive-date=16 February 2008}}</ref> and ].<ref>Gary Presland, ''The First Residents of Melbourne's Western Region'', (revised edition), Harriland Press, 1997. {{ISBN|978-0-646-33150-8}}. Presland says on p. 1: "There is some evidence to show that people were living in the ] valley, near present day ], about 40,000 years ago."</ref>) | |||
* c. 28,500 BCE - New Guinea is populated by colonists from ] or ].<ref>James Trager, ''The People's Chronology'', 1994, ISBN 0-8050-3134-0</ref> | |||
* c. 32,000 BP / 30,000 BCE – Beginnings of ] culture, exemplified by the ] ("]") of ] in France. | |||
* c. 28,000 BP - 20,000 BP - ] period in Europe. Harpoons, needles, and saws invented. | |||
* c. 30,500 BP / 28,500 BCE – New Guinea is populated by colonists from Asia or Australia.<ref>James Trager, ''The People's Chronology'', 1994, {{ISBN|978-0-8050-3134-8}}</ref> | |||
* c. 26,000 BP / c. 24,000 BC - Women around the world use fibers to make baby-carriers, clothes, bags, baskets, and nets. | |||
* c. |
* c. 30,000 BP / 28,000 BCE – A herd of ] is slaughtered and butchered by humans in the Vezere Valley in what is today France.<ref>Gene S. Stuart, "Ice Age Hunters: Artists in Hidden Cages." In ''Mysteries of the Ancient World'', a publication of the National Geographic Society, 1979. pp. 11–18.</ref> | ||
* c. |
* c. 28,000–20,000 BP – ] period in Europe. Harpoons, needles, and saws invented. | ||
* c. 26,500 BP – ] (LGM). Subsequently, the ice melts and the glaciers retreat again (]). During this latter period human beings return to Western Europe (see ] culture) and enter North America from Eastern Siberia for the first time (see ], ] culture and ]). | |||
* c. 16,000 BP / 14,000 BC - ] sculpted in clay deep inside the cave now known as Le Tuc d'Audoubert in the French Pyrenees near what is now the border of ].<ref>{{cite book|last=Stuart|first=Gene S.|title=Mysteries of the Ancient World|year=1979|publisher=National Geographic Society|pages=8-10|chapter=Ice Age Hunters: Artists in Hidden Cages}}</ref> | |||
* c. 26,000 BP / 24,000 BCE – People around the world use fibres to make baby-carriers, clothes, bags, baskets, and nets.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.khanacademy.org/humanities/prehistoric-art/paleolithic-art/a/venus-of-willendorf|title=Venus of Willendorf|website=Khan Academy|language=en|access-date=18 February 2019|archive-date=3 February 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190203233412/https://www.khanacademy.org/humanities/prehistoric-art/paleolithic-art/a/venus-of-willendorf|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
* c. 14,800 BP / 12,800 BC - The Humid Period begins in North Africa. The region that would later become the ] is wet and fertile, and the ]s are full.<ref>"Shift from Savannah to Sahara was Gradual," by Kenneth Chang, '']'', May 9, 2008.</ref> | |||
* c. 25,000 BP / 23,000 BCE – ] consisting of huts built of rocks and ] bones is founded near what is now ] in ] in the ]. This is the oldest human permanent settlement that has been found by archaeologists.<ref>{{cite book|last=Stuart|first=Gene S.|title=Mysteries of the Ancient World|year=1979|publisher=National Geographic Society|page=19 |chapter=Ice Age Hunters: Artists in Hidden Cages}}</ref> | |||
;] | |||
* c. 23,000 BP / 21,000 BCE – Small-scale trial cultivation of plants in ], a hunter-gatherers' sedentary camp on the shore of the Sea of Galilee, Israel.<ref>{{cite journal | doi = 10.1371/journal.pone.0131422 | volume=10 | title=The Origin of Cultivation and Proto-Weeds, Long Before Neolithic Farming | year=2015 | journal=PLOS ONE | page=e0131422 | last1 = Snir | first1 = Ainit | issue=7 | pmid=26200895 | pmc=4511808| bibcode=2015PLoSO..1031422S | doi-access=free }}</ref> | |||
;] | |||
* c. 16,000 BP / 14,000 BCE – ] (bison) sculpted in clay deep inside the cave now known as ] in the French ] near what is now the border of Spain.<ref>{{cite book|last=Stuart|first=Gene S.|title=Mysteries of the Ancient World|year=1979|publisher=National Geographic Society|pages=8–10|chapter=Ice Age Hunters: Artists in Hidden Cages}}</ref> | |||
* c. 8000 BC / 7000 BC - In northern ], now northern ], cultivation of ] and ] begins. At first they are used for ], ], and ], eventually for ].<ref>Kiple, Kenneth F. and Ornelas, Kriemhild Coneè, eds., The Cambridge World History of Food, Cambridge University Press, 2000, p. 83</ref> In early agriculture at this time, the Planting stick is used, but it is replaced by a primitive ] in subsequent centuries.<ref>"No-Till: The Quiet Revolution," by David Huggins and John Reganold, ''Scientific American'', July 2008, pages 70-77.</ref> Around this time, a round stone tower, now preserved to about 8.5 meters high and 8.5 meters in diameter is built in ].<ref>Fagan, Brian M, ed. ''The Oxford Companion to Archaeology'', Oxford University Press, Oxford 1996 ISBN 978-0-521-40216-3 p 363</ref> | |||
* c. 14,800 BP / 12,800 BCE – The ] begins in North Africa. The region that would later become the ] is wet and fertile, and the ]s are full.<ref>"Shift from Savannah to Sahara was Gradual", by Kenneth Chang, '']'', 9 May 2008.</ref> | |||
;] | |||
* c. 3700 BC - ] writing appears and records begin to be kept. | |||
===Mesolithic/Epipaleolithic=== | |||
* c. 3000 BC - ] construction begins. In its first version, it consisted of a circular ditch and bank, with 56 wooden posts.<ref>Caroline Alexander, "Stonehenge," ''National Geographic'', June 2008.</ref> | |||
* {{Circa|12,500}} to 9,500 BCE – ]: a culture of sedentary hunter-gatherers who may have cultivated ] in the ] (]) | |||
===Neolithic=== | |||
] were the result of a genetic admixture between the ] and ]s.]] | |||
* {{circa|9,400}}–9,200 BCE – ] of a ] (and therefore sterile) type are cultivated in the early ] village ] (in the ], 13 km north of ]). The find predates the domestication of ], ], and ]s, and may thus be the first known instance of agriculture.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Kislev |first1=M. E. |last2=Hartmann |first2=A. |last3=Bar-Yosef |first3=O. |title=Early Domesticated Fig in the Jordan Valley |journal=Science |publisher=American Association for the Advancement of Science |location=Washington, DC |volume=312 |issue=5778 |pages=1372–1374 |year=2006a |doi=10.1126/science.1125910 |pmid=16741119 |bibcode=2006Sci...312.1372K |s2cid=42150441}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Kislev |first1=M. E. |last2=Hartmann |first2=A. |last3=Bar-Yosef |first3=O. |title=Response to Comment on "Early Domesticated Fig in the Jordan Valley" |journal=Science |publisher=American Association for the Advancement of Science |location=Washington, DC |volume=314 |issue=5806 |page=1683b |year=2006b |doi=10.1126/science.1133748 |pmid=17170278 |bibcode=2006Sci...314.1683K |doi-access=free}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Lev-Yadun |first1=S. |last2=Ne'Eman |first2=G. |last3=Abbo |first3=S. |last4=Flaishman |first4=M. A. |title=Comment on "Early Domesticated Fig in the Jordan Valley" |journal=Science |publisher=American Association for the Advancement of Science |location=Washington, DC |volume=314 |issue=5806 |page=1683a |year=2006 |doi=10.1126/science.1132636 |pmid=17170278 |bibcode=2006Sci...314.1683L |doi-access=free}}</ref> | |||
* {{circa|9,000 BCE}} – Circles of T-shaped stone pillars erected at ] in the ] of Turkey during ] (PPNA) period. As yet unexcavated structures at the site are thought to date back to the epipaleolithic. | |||
* {{circa|8,000 BCE}} / 7000 BCE – In northern ], now northern ], cultivation of barley and wheat begins. At first they are used for ], ], and ], eventually for ].<ref>Kiple, Kenneth F. and Ornelas, Kriemhild Coneè, eds., The Cambridge World History of Food, Cambridge University Press, 2000, p. 83</ref> In early agriculture at this time the planting stick is used, but it is replaced by a primitive ] in subsequent centuries.<ref>"No-Till: The Quiet Revolution", by David Huggins and John Reganold, ''Scientific American'', July 2008, pp. 70–77.</ref> Around this time, a round stone tower, now preserved at about 8.5 meters high and 8.5 meters in diameter is built in ].<ref>Fagan, Brian M, ed. ''The Oxford Companion to Archaeology'', Oxford University Press, Oxford 1996 {{ISBN|978-0-521-40216-3}}, p. 363.</ref> | |||
* {{circa|4,700 BCE}} - {circa|4,500 BCE}} In Central Europe ] emerge.<ref>map in Daim and Neubauer 2005, p. 14; reprinted in Plath 2011, p. 24. Main distribution is between the ] and the middle ], say between Budapest and Brunswick (800 km). Including outliers, the area is somewhat larger, encompassing most of ], stretching over some 1100 km from the ] confluence to the lower Rhine (Ruhr area).</ref> | |||
===Chalcolithic=== | |||
* {{circa|3,700 BCE}} – ] ], known as ], appears in ], and records begin to be kept. According to the majority of specialists, the first Mesopotamian writing (actually still pictographic proto-writing at this stage) was a tool for record-keeping that had little connection to the spoken language.<ref>Glassner, Jean-Jacques. ''The Invention of Cuneiform: Writing In Sumer''. Trans. ]. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003. Ebook.</ref> | |||
* {{circa|3,300 BCE}} – Approximate date of death of "] the Iceman", found preserved in ice in the ] in 1991. A copper-bladed axe, which is a characteristic technology of this era, was found with the corpse. | |||
* {{circa|3,100 BCE}} – ] is constructed. This stone-built village consisted of ten clustered houses with stone hearths, beds, cupboards, and an ancient sewer system. This village occupied for 600 years before being abandoned in {{circa|2,500 BCE}}. | |||
* {{circa|3,000 BCE}} – ] construction begins. In its first version, it consisted of a circular ditch and bank, with 56 wooden posts.<ref>Caroline Alexander, "Stonehenge", ''National Geographic'', June 2008.</ref> | |||
* {{circa|3,000 BCE}} – The ] expansions from the ] into Europe and Asia. These migrations are thought to have spread Yamnaya ] ancestry and ] across large parts of Eurasia.<ref>{{cite news |first=Andrew |last=Curry |title=The first Europeans weren't who you might think |url=https://www.nationalgeographic.com/culture/article/first-europeans-immigrants-genetic-testing-feature |work=National Geographic |date=August 2019 |access-date=28 October 2022 |archive-date=6 March 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230306235330/https://www.nationalgeographic.com/culture/article/first-europeans-immigrants-genetic-testing-feature |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
== By region == | == By region == | ||
]'' for the last two million years]] | |||
] 70–20 thousand years ago]] | |||
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;Old World | ;Old World | ||
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** Southeast Asia: | |||
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== See also == | == See also == | ||
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== References == | == References == | ||
{{Reflist}} | {{Reflist}} | ||
== External links == | == External links == | ||
{{Wikiquote}} | |||
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* The Neanderthal site at , Belgium. | |||
* is an academic journal specialising in Northeast Asian and North American archaeology. | * is an academic journal specialising in Northeast Asian and North American archaeology. | ||
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* a collection of resources for students from the Courtenay Middle School Library. | * a collection of resources for students from the Courtenay Middle School Library. | ||
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Latest revision as of 02:39, 24 December 2024
Span of time before recorded history For other uses, see Prehistory (disambiguation).
Part of a series on |
Human history and prehistory |
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↑ before Homo (Pliocene epoch) |
Prehistory |
Recorded history |
↓ Future (Holocene epoch) |
Prehistory, also called pre-literary history, is the period of human history between the first known use of stone tools by hominins c. 3.3 million years ago and the beginning of recorded history with the invention of writing systems. The use of symbols, marks, and images appears very early among humans, but the earliest known writing systems appeared c. 5,200 years ago. It took thousands of years for writing systems to be widely adopted, with writing having spread to almost all cultures by the 19th century. The end of prehistory therefore came at different times in different places, and the term is less often used in discussing societies where prehistory ended relatively recently.
In the early Bronze Age, Sumer in Mesopotamia, the Indus Valley Civilisation, and ancient Egypt were the first civilizations to develop their own scripts and keep historical records, with their neighbours following. Most other civilizations reached their end of prehistory during the following Iron Age. The three-age division of prehistory into Stone Age, Bronze Age, and Iron Age remains in use for much of Eurasia and North Africa, but is not generally used in those parts of the world where the working of hard metals arrived abruptly from contact with Eurasian cultures, such as Oceania, Australasia, much of Sub-Saharan Africa, and parts of the Americas. With some exceptions in pre-Columbian civilizations in the Americas, these areas did not develop complex writing systems before the arrival of Eurasians, so their prehistory reaches into relatively recent periods; for example, 1788 is usually taken as the end of the prehistory of Australia.
The period when a culture is written about by others, but has not developed its own writing system, is often known as the protohistory of the culture. By definition, there are no written records from human prehistory, which can only be known from material archaeological and anthropological evidence: prehistoric materials and human remains. These were at first understood by the collection of folklore and by analogy with pre-literate societies observed in modern times. The key step to understanding prehistoric evidence is dating, and reliable dating techniques have developed steadily since the nineteenth century. The most common of these dating techniques is radiocarbon dating. Further evidence has come from the reconstruction of ancient spoken languages. More recent techniques include forensic chemical analysis to reveal the use and provenance of materials, and genetic analysis of bones to determine kinship and physical characteristics of prehistoric peoples.
Definition
Lion-Man of Hohlenstein-Stadel, Aurignacian culture, c. 41.000 BPBone flute from Geißenklösterle. Aurignacian culture, 43,000–35,000 BCBeginning and end
The beginning of prehistory is normally taken to be marked by human-like beings appearing on Earth. The date marking its end is typically defined as the advent of the contemporary written historical record.
Both dates consequently vary widely from region to region. For example, in European regions, prehistory cannot begin before c. 1.3 million years ago, which is when the first signs of human presence have been found; however, Africa and Asia contain sites dated as early as c. 2.5 and 1.8 million years ago, respectively. Depending on the date when relevant records become a useful academic resource, its end date also varies. For example, in Egypt it is generally accepted that prehistory ended around 3100 BCE, whereas in New Guinea the end of the prehistoric era is set much more recently, in the 1870s, when the Russian anthropologist Nicholai Miklukho-Maklai spent several years living among native peoples, and described their way of life in a comprehensive treatise. In Europe the relatively well-documented classical cultures of Ancient Greece and Ancient Rome had neighbouring cultures, including the Celts and the Etruscans, with little writing. Historians debate how much weight to give to the sometimes biased accounts in Greek and Roman literature, of these protohistoric cultures.
Time periods
Main articles: Three-age system and Geologic time scaleIn dividing up human prehistory in Eurasia, historians typically use the three-age system, whereas scholars of pre-human time periods typically use the well-defined geologic record and its internationally defined stratum base within the geologic time scale. The three-age system is the periodization of human prehistory into three consecutive time periods, named for their predominant tool-making technologies: Stone Age, Bronze Age and Iron Age. In some areas, there is also a transition period between Stone Age and Bronze Age, the Chalcolithic or Copper Age.
For the prehistory of the Americas see Pre-Columbian era.
History of the term
The notion of "prehistory" emerged during the Enlightenment in the work of antiquarians who used the word "primitive" to describe societies that existed before written records. The word "prehistory" first appeared in English in 1836 in the Foreign Quarterly Review.
The geologic time scale for pre-human time periods, and the three-age system for human prehistory, were systematised during the nineteenth century in the work of British, French, German, and Scandinavian anthropologists, archaeologists, and antiquarians.
Means of research
The main source of information for prehistory is archaeology (a branch of anthropology), but some scholars are beginning to make more use of evidence from the natural and social sciences.
The primary researchers into human prehistory are archaeologists and physical anthropologists who use excavation, geologic and geographic surveys, and other scientific analysis to reveal and interpret the nature and behavior of pre-literate and non-literate peoples. Human population geneticists and historical linguists are also providing valuable insight. Cultural anthropologists help provide context for societal interactions, by which objects of human origin pass among people, allowing an analysis of any article that arises in a human prehistoric context. Therefore, data about prehistory is provided by a wide variety of natural and social sciences, such as anthropology, archaeology, archaeoastronomy, comparative linguistics, biology, geology, molecular genetics, paleontology, palynology, physical anthropology, and many others.
Human prehistory differs from history not only in terms of its chronology, but in the way it deals with the activities of archaeological cultures rather than named nations or individuals. Restricted to material processes, remains, and artefacts rather than written records, prehistory is anonymous. Because of this, reference terms that prehistorians use, such as "Neanderthal" or "Iron Age", are modern labels with definitions sometimes subject to debate.
Stone Age
Main article: Stone AgeThe concept of a "Stone Age" is found useful in the archaeology of most of the world, although in the archaeology of the Americas it is called by different names and begins with a Lithic stage, or sometimes Paleo-Indian. The sub-divisions described below are used for Eurasia, and not consistently across the whole area.
Palaeolithic
"Palaeolithic" means "Old Stone Age", and begins with the first use of stone tools. The Paleolithic is the earliest period of the Stone Age. It extends from the earliest known use of stone tools by hominins c. 3.3 million years ago, to the end of the Pleistocene c. 11,650 BP (before the present period).
The early part of the Palaeolithic is called the Lower Paleolithic (as in excavations it appears underneath the Upper Paleolithic), beginning with the earliest stone tools dated to around 3.3 million years ago at the Lomekwi site in Kenya. These tools predate the genus Homo and were probably used by Kenyanthropus. Evidence of control of fire by early hominins during the Lower Palaeolithic Era is uncertain and has at best limited scholarly support. The most widely accepted claim is that H. erectus or H. ergaster made fires between 790,000 and 690,000 BP in a site at Bnot Ya'akov Bridge, Israel. The use of fire enabled early humans to cook food, provide warmth, have a light source, deter animals at night and meditate.
Early Homo sapiens originated some 300,000 years ago, ushering in the Middle Palaeolithic. Anatomic changes indicating modern language capacity also arise during the Middle Palaeolithic. During the Middle Palaeolithic Era, there is the first definitive evidence of human use of fire. Sites in Zambia have charred logs, charcoal and carbonized plants, that have been dated to 180,000 BP. The systematic burial of the dead, music, prehistoric art, and the use of increasingly sophisticated multi-part tools are highlights of the Middle Paleolithic.
The Upper Paleolithic extends from 50,000 and 12,000 years ago, with the first organized settlements and blossoming of artistic work.
Throughout the Palaeolithic, humans generally lived as nomadic hunter-gatherers. Hunter-gatherer societies tended to be very small and egalitarian, although hunter-gatherer societies with abundant resources or advanced food-storage techniques sometimes developed sedentary lifestyles with complex social structures such as chiefdoms, and social stratification. Long-distance contacts may have been established, as in the case of Indigenous Australian "highways" known as songlines.
Mesolithic
The Mesolithic, or Middle Stone Age (from the Greek mesos, 'middle', and lithos, 'stone'), was a period in the development of human technology between the Palaeolithic and Neolithic.
The Mesolithic period began with the retreat of glaciers at the end of the Pleistocene epoch, some 10,000 BP, and ended with the introduction of agriculture, the date of which varied by geographic region. In some areas, such as the Near East, agriculture was already underway by the end of the Pleistocene, and there the Mesolithic is short and poorly defined. In areas with limited glacial impact, the term "Epipalaeolithic" is preferred.
Regions that experienced greater environmental effects as the last ice age ended have a much more evident Mesolithic era, lasting millennia. In Northern Europe, societies were able to live well on rich food supplies from the marshlands fostered by the warmer climate. Such conditions produced distinctive human behaviours that are preserved in the material record, such as the Maglemosian and Azilian cultures. These conditions also delayed the coming of the Neolithic until as late as 4000 BCE (6,000 BP) in northern Europe.
Remains from this period are few and far between, often limited to middens. In forested areas, the first signs of deforestation have been found, although this would only begin in earnest during the Neolithic, when more space was needed for agriculture.
The Mesolithic is characterized in most areas by small composite flint tools: microliths and microburins. Fishing tackle, stone adzes, and wooden objects such as canoes and bows have been found at some sites. These technologies first occur in Africa, associated with the Azilian cultures, before spreading to Europe through the Iberomaurusian culture of Northern Africa and the Kebaran culture of the Levant. However, independent discovery is not ruled out.
Neolithic
"Neolithic" means "New Stone Age", from about 10,200 BCE in some parts of the Middle East, but later in other parts of the world, and ended between 4,500 and 2,000 BCE. Although there were several species of humans during the Paleolithic, by the Neolithic only Homo sapiens sapiens remained. This was a period of technological and social developments which established most of the basic elements of historical cultures, such as the domestication of crops and animals, and the establishment of permanent settlements and early chiefdoms. The era commenced with the beginning of farming, which produced the "Neolithic Revolution". It ended when metal tools became widespread (in the Copper Age or Bronze Age; or, in some geographical regions, in the Iron Age). The term Neolithic is commonly used in the Old World; its application to cultures in the Americas and Oceania is complicated by the fact standard progression from stone to metal tools, as seen in the Old World, does not neatly apply.
Early Neolithic farming was limited to a narrow range of plants, both wild and domesticated, which included einkorn wheat, millet and spelt, and the keeping of dogs, sheep, and goats. By about 6,900–6,400 BCE, it included domesticated cattle and pigs, the establishment of permanently or seasonally inhabited settlements, and the use of pottery. The Neolithic period saw the development of early villages, agriculture, animal domestication, tools, and the onset of the earliest recorded incidents of warfare.
Settlements became more permanent, some with circular houses made of mudbrick with a single room. Settlements might have a surrounding stone wall to keep domesticated animals in and hostile tribes out. Later settlements have rectangular mud-brick houses where the family lived in single or multiple rooms. Burial findings suggest an ancestor cult with preserved skulls of the dead. The Vinča culture may have created the earliest system of writing. The megalithic temple complexes of Ġgantija are notable for their gigantic structures. Although some late Eurasian Neolithic societies formed complex stratified chiefdoms or even states, states evolved in Eurasia only with the rise of metallurgy, and most Neolithic societies on the whole were relatively simple and egalitarian. Most clothing appears to have been made of animal skins, as indicated by finds of large numbers of bone and antler pins which are ideal for fastening leather. Wool cloth and linen might have become available during the later Neolithic, as suggested by finds of perforated stones that (depending on size) may have served as spindle whorls or loom weights.
Chalcolithic
Main article: ChalcolithicIn Old World archaeology, the "Chalcolithic", "Eneolithic", or "Copper Age" refers to a transitional period where early copper metallurgy appeared alongside the widespread use of stone tools. During this period, some weapons and tools were made of copper. This period was still largely Neolithic in character. It is a phase of the Bronze Age before it was discovered that adding tin to copper formed the harder bronze. The Copper Age is seen as a transition period between the Stone Age and Bronze Age.
An archaeological site in Serbia contains the oldest securely dated evidence of copper making at high temperature, from 7,500 years ago. The find in 2010 extends the known record of copper smelting by about 800 years, and suggests that copper smelting may have been invented independently in separate parts of Asia and Europe at that time, rather than spreading from a single source. The emergence of metallurgy may have occurred first in the Fertile Crescent, where it gave rise to the Bronze Age in the 4th millennium BCE (the traditional view), although finds from the Vinča culture in Europe have now been securely dated to slightly earlier than those of the Fertile Crescent. Timna Valley contains evidence of copper mining 7,000 years ago. The process of transition from Neolithic to Chalcolithic in the Middle East is characterized in archaeological stone tool assemblages by a decline in high quality raw material procurement and use. North Africa and the Nile Valley imported its iron technology from the Near East and followed the Near Eastern course of Bronze Age and Iron Age development.
Bronze Age
Main article: Bronze AgeThe Bronze Age is the earliest period in which some civilizations reached the end of prehistory, by introducing written records. The Bronze Age, or parts thereof, are thus considered to be part of prehistory only for the regions and civilizations who developed a system of keeping written records during later periods. The invention of writing coincides in some areas with the beginnings of the Bronze Age. After the appearance of writing, people started creating texts including written records of administrative matters.
The Bronze Age refers to a period in human cultural development when the most advanced metalworking (at least in systematic and widespread use) included techniques for smelting copper and tin from naturally occurring outcroppings of ores, and then combining them to cast bronze. These naturally occurring ores typically included arsenic as a common impurity. Tin ores are rare, as reflected in the fact there were no tin bronzes in Western Asia before 3000 BCE. The Bronze Age forms part of the three-age system for prehistoric societies. In this system, it follows the Neolithic in some areas of the world.
While copper is a common ore, deposits of tin are rare in the Old World, and often had to be traded or carried considerable distances from the few mines, stimulating the creation of extensive trading routes. In many areas as far apart as China and England, the valuable new material was used for weapons, but for a long time apparently not available for agricultural tools. Much of it seems to have been hoarded by social elites, and sometimes deposited in extravagant quantities, from Chinese ritual bronzes and Indian copper hoards, to European hoards of unused axe-heads.
By the end of the Bronze Age large states, whose armies imposed themselves on people with a different culture, and are often called empires, had arisen in Egypt, China, Anatolia (the Hittites), and Mesopotamia, all of them literate.
Iron Age
Further information: Protohistory and Ancient historyMain articles: Iron Age and Classical antiquityThe Iron Age is not part of prehistory for all civilizations who had introduced written records during the Bronze Age. Most remaining civilizations did so during the Iron Age, often through conquest by empires, which continued to expand during this period. For example, in most of Europe conquest by the Roman Empire means the term Iron Age is replaced by "Roman", "Gallo-Roman", and similar terms after the conquest. Even before conquest, many areas began to have a protohistory, as they were written about by literate cultures; the protohistory of Ireland is an example.
In archaeology, the Iron Age refers to the advent of ferrous metallurgy. The adoption of iron coincided with other changes, often including more sophisticated agricultural practices, religious beliefs and artistic styles, which makes the archaeological Iron Age coincide with the "Axial Age" in the history of philosophy. Although iron ore is common, the metalworking techniques necessary to use iron are different from those needed for the metal used earlier, more heat is required. Once the technical challenge had been solved, iron replaced bronze as its higher abundance meant armies could be armed much more easily with iron weapons.
Timeline
Timeline of human evolution and Timeline of prehistoryAll dates are approximate and conjectural, obtained through research in the fields of anthropology, archaeology, genetics, geology, or linguistics. They are all subject to revision due to new discoveries or improved calculations. BP stands for "Before Present (1950)." BCE stands for "Before Common Era".
Paleolithic
- c. 3.3 million BP – Earliest stone tools
- c. 2.8 million BP – Genus Homo appears
- c. 600,000 BP – Hunting-gathering
- c. 400,000 BP – Control of fire by early humans
- c. 300,000 BP – Anatomically modern humans (Homo sapiens sapiens) appear in Africa, one of whose characteristics is a lack of significant body hair compared to other primates. See Jebel Irhoud.
- c. 300,000–30,000 BP – Mousterian (Neanderthal) culture in Europe.
- c. 170,000–83,000 BP – Invention of clothing
- c. 75,000 BP – Toba Volcano supereruption.
- c. 80,000–50,000 BP – Homo sapiens exit Africa as a single population. In the next millennia, descendants from this population migrate to southern India, the Malay islands, Australia, Japan, China, Siberia, Alaska, and the northwestern coast of North America.
- c. 80,000–50,000? BP – Behavioral modernity, by this point including language and sophisticated cognition
- c. 45,000 BP / 43,000 BCE – Beginnings of Châtelperronian culture in France.
- c. 43,000 BP - 37,000 BP The Aurignacian culture began, for example in the German Swabian Jura
- c. 40,000 BP / 38,000 BCE – First human settlement in the southern half of the Australian mainland, by indigenous Australians (including the future sites of Sydney, Perth, and Melbourne.)
- c. 32,000 BP / 30,000 BCE – Beginnings of Aurignacian culture, exemplified by the cave paintings ("parietal art") of Chauvet Cave in France.
- c. 30,500 BP / 28,500 BCE – New Guinea is populated by colonists from Asia or Australia.
- c. 30,000 BP / 28,000 BCE – A herd of reindeer is slaughtered and butchered by humans in the Vezere Valley in what is today France.
- c. 28,000–20,000 BP – Gravettian period in Europe. Harpoons, needles, and saws invented.
- c. 26,500 BP – Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). Subsequently, the ice melts and the glaciers retreat again (Late Glacial Maximum). During this latter period human beings return to Western Europe (see Magdalenian culture) and enter North America from Eastern Siberia for the first time (see Paleo-Indians, pre-Clovis culture and Settlement of the Americas).
- c. 26,000 BP / 24,000 BCE – People around the world use fibres to make baby-carriers, clothes, bags, baskets, and nets.
- c. 25,000 BP / 23,000 BCE – A settlement consisting of huts built of rocks and mammoth bones is founded near what is now Dolní Věstonice in Moravia in the Czech Republic. This is the oldest human permanent settlement that has been found by archaeologists.
- c. 23,000 BP / 21,000 BCE – Small-scale trial cultivation of plants in Ohalo II, a hunter-gatherers' sedentary camp on the shore of the Sea of Galilee, Israel.
- c. 16,000 BP / 14,000 BCE – Wisent (bison) sculpted in clay deep inside the cave now known as Le Tuc d'Audoubert in the French Pyrenees near what is now the border of Spain.
- c. 14,800 BP / 12,800 BCE – The Humid Period begins in North Africa. The region that would later become the Sahara is wet and fertile, and the aquifers are full.
Mesolithic/Epipaleolithic
- c. 12,500 to 9,500 BCE – Natufian culture: a culture of sedentary hunter-gatherers who may have cultivated rye in the Levant (Eastern Mediterranean)
Neolithic
- c. 9,400–9,200 BCE – Figs of a parthenocarpic (and therefore sterile) type are cultivated in the early Neolithic village Gilgal I (in the Jordan Valley, 13 km north of Jericho). The find predates the domestication of wheat, barley, and legumes, and may thus be the first known instance of agriculture.
- c. 9,000 BCE – Circles of T-shaped stone pillars erected at Göbekli Tepe in the Southeastern Anatolia Region of Turkey during pre-pottery Neolithic A (PPNA) period. As yet unexcavated structures at the site are thought to date back to the epipaleolithic.
- c. 8,000 BCE / 7000 BCE – In northern Mesopotamia, now northern Iraq, cultivation of barley and wheat begins. At first they are used for beer, gruel, and soup, eventually for bread. In early agriculture at this time the planting stick is used, but it is replaced by a primitive plough in subsequent centuries. Around this time, a round stone tower, now preserved at about 8.5 meters high and 8.5 meters in diameter is built in Jericho.
- c. 4,700 BCE - {circa|4,500 BCE}} In Central Europe Neolithic circulars emerge.
Chalcolithic
- c. 3,700 BCE – Pictographic proto-writing, known as proto-cuneiform, appears in Sumer, and records begin to be kept. According to the majority of specialists, the first Mesopotamian writing (actually still pictographic proto-writing at this stage) was a tool for record-keeping that had little connection to the spoken language.
- c. 3,300 BCE – Approximate date of death of "Ötzi the Iceman", found preserved in ice in the Ötztal Alps in 1991. A copper-bladed axe, which is a characteristic technology of this era, was found with the corpse.
- c. 3,100 BCE – Skara Brae is constructed. This stone-built village consisted of ten clustered houses with stone hearths, beds, cupboards, and an ancient sewer system. This village occupied for 600 years before being abandoned in c. 2,500 BCE.
- c. 3,000 BCE – Stonehenge construction begins. In its first version, it consisted of a circular ditch and bank, with 56 wooden posts.
- c. 3,000 BCE – The Yamnaya expansions from the Pontic–Caspian steppe into Europe and Asia. These migrations are thought to have spread Yamnaya Steppe pastoralist ancestry and Indo-European languages across large parts of Eurasia.
By region
- Old World
- Prehistoric Africa
- Prehistoric Asia
- East Asia:
- South Asia
- Prehistory of Central Asia
- Prehistoric Siberia
- Southeast Asia:
- Southwest Asia (Near East)
- Prehistoric Europe
- New World
- Pre-Columbian Americas
- Oceania
See also
- Archaic humans
- Band society
- History of the family
- Human evolution
- Paleoanthropology
- Pantribal sodality
- Prehistoric medicine
- Prehistoric music
- Prehistoric religion
- Prehistoric warfare
- Younger Dryas
- Uncontacted peoples
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External links
- Submerged Landscapes Archaeological Network
- North Pacific Prehistory is an academic journal specialising in Northeast Asian and North American archaeology.
- Prehistory in Algeria and in Morocco
- Early Humans a collection of resources for students from the Courtenay Middle School Library.
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