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AP®︎ World History
Course: AP®︎ World History > Unit 1
Lesson 2: The origin of humans and early human societies- History and prehistory
- Prehistory before written records
- Peopling the earth
- Homo sapiens and early human migration
- Organizing paleolithic societies
- Paleolithic technology, culture, and art
- Lesson summary: the origin of humans and early human societies
- The origin of humans and early human societies
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Organizing paleolithic societies
How did people live, survive, and thrive in the Old Stone Age?
Want to join the conversation?
- Maybe the hunter/gatherers that built the Gobekli Tepe would come back to that place once every year or something like that? It seems like it would be a waste to build a monument like that and never come back to it.(36 votes)
- It could have been a map or guide, showing where crops and herds would be at different times throughout the year, possibly using the stars.(10 votes)
- So Gobelik Tepe is like Stonehenge?(17 votes)
- Hi Jari, good question! Both are what are called "megalithic (large stone) structures." The form of each site is similar to the other and construction techniques used were probably similar, as well. Beyond that, it is hard to say since we do not really know what they were used for. Gobekli Tepe is much older (built about 11,500 years ago - Stonehenge is probably more like 4,500 to 5000 years old).
Hope that helps!(30 votes)
- Is a sickle like a scythe?(16 votes)
- Yes, but smaller and shorter. A scythe has a long handle with a curved blade and is used with both hands. The sickle has a short handle and can be held in one hand.(20 votes)
- does anyone use khan academy anymore its so lonely here.(13 votes)
- We're still here(2 votes)
- Did the ancient people have a leader to lead them? If they didn't, did they survive
individually?(8 votes)- They lived in communities. And there was no 'leader' in a modern sense. There were leaders in certain activities like hunting or dancing. And people didn't not survived individually - they lived in peer communities. Exclusion from a community means death.(11 votes)
- So, is Gobekli Tepe the only hunter/gatherer city we know from that era?(6 votes)
- No, there is another - Nevalı Çori. Of course, there may be many more waiting to be discovered.(10 votes)
- how did the early humans know what the plants needed "to grow"?(5 votes)
- The same way we figure things out today: a combination of observation and intuition. Early humans probably noticed that there were more plants in areas with sunlight, rainfall, etc. They then attempted to replicate these good-for-growing conditions in their farms. With a bit of trial and error, agriculture was born.(9 votes)
- How did people live, survive, and thrive in the Old Stone Age?(5 votes)
- steve......the best builder in minecraft lol(4 votes)
- Sorry if that sounded rude. I did not mean to be offensive. I'm just curious about why we make these claims.(4 votes)
Video transcript
[David] Hey, Steve. [Steve] Hey, David. [David] So, I wanna interrogate
this question with you, which is, if we're talking
about the old Stone Age, right, the Paleolithos, right? Pale means old, in Greek
lithos is Greek for stones, this is the old Stone Age. We're talking about a
timeframe of about 250,000 to what, 12,000 years ago? -[Steve] 12 to 10,000 years ago. - [David] What — how were those
societies organized? Like if you and I were early human beings, and the reason we choose
the number 250,000 is because this is when we know for certain that modern Homo sapiens is walking around and doing its thing. - [Steve] Right, in Africa
at least, at that time. - [David] Right. And 12,000 years ago is the beginning of the agricultural Neolithic Revolution, we'll get to that in
other videos, but for now, we're talking about the old Stone Age. We don't have, like crops
that are being cultivated, we don't have domesticated
animals, but we have human beings surviving, thriving, and spreading. - [Steve] Right, and I think
one thing we wanna keep in mind as we're talking about the Paleolithic era and human societies, is that
we're talking about a very wide ranging population of
humans around the globe, engaging in different
behaviors at different times in different contexts, so we're
gonna speak in generalities here for the sake of
making sense in the video, but you wanna keep in mind
that not everything we say is directly applicable to
everybody everywhere at this time. - [David] Correct. What we do know is that human
beings all over the world were using tools, and
that is what this is. This chunk of rock would've
probably been around, I think this one's about
five inches long, five or so. This is called a hand ax,
and it may just look like a chunk of rock to you, and
that is indeed what it is, but you can look at these depressions in the side of the rock, and thereby surmise how
this thing was made. This is a piece of volcanic
rock, this is a piece of basalt, and the way it was made
was, an early human being took a larger, more dense
and harder piece of rock, and flaked off little pieces. So you can see this was
repeatedly hit and chipped away in order to form this sharp point. This is the sort of tool
that if, Steve, or I, or you were living in the Paleolithic era, would use to do everything. This would be your Swiss Army knife. - [Steve] Right, and so when
you look at that, it's not easy to discern a particular
use for this piece of rock, and people who study
these things for a living can't always tell exactly
what they were used for, but they basically assume
that they have performed a wide range of functions,
so you might use that as kind of a bludgeon if
you were hunting animals. - [David] What's a bludgeon? - [Steve] To deliver a
stunning blow to an animal, to hit them with it, essentially. - [David] There's you, Paleolithic
Steve, stunning an ibex with your rock tool. - [Steve] Already? (chuckles) Handsome fellow.
- Yeah. - [Steve] And so you might
use that as a hunting tool. You also might use it once
you've subdued the animal, you killed it, you could use it as a knife to butcher the animal, you
could use it as a scraping tool to get the hide prepared
for some other use, you could use it as a digging
tool if you were trying to get at some sort of starchy
tuber under the ground that you might want to eat, for example. - [David] So that brings
me to the question of, what did early human beings eat? What's the Paleolithic diet? What is that Paleo diet, Steve? - [Steve] (chuckles) So, for
most of this time period, what they're finding is,
people would be harvesting naturally growing fruits,
vegetable matters, animals that they could catch and kill, and you don't really see grain
being deliberately harvested, and this would be wild
grain at this point, until roughly 16,000 years ago. Prior to that point,
mostly naturally occurring fruit and vegetable matter, and animals that they
could catch and kill. The first evidence for
grain harvesting shows up in North Africa about 16,000 years ago. And again, we're always
talking very approximate dates when were looking at this time period. - [David] So we've got
these multiuse stone tools and hand axes that are used to harvest
both animal proteins and tubers from the earth,
or berries from trees, or any other variety of
wild fruits and vegetables, but not grains until a bit later. - [Steve] Correct. - [David] For the bulk of human history, what did societies look like? - [Steve] So when we we're
talking about a society, we're talking about something
that occurs on a really small scale here, so most
estimates are looking at groups between maybe 20 to 50
individuals working together, living together. - [David] So that's my the
neighborhood, that's my block, that's like my entire social group then. - [Steve] Right, and you
have to think about it in terms of the resources
that are available if you're living a hunter-forager
lifestyle, too, though. When you're harvesting
fruit, and vegetable, and animal matter as your
diet, you are limited to what the environment is producing for you. Remember, they're not engaging
actively in agriculture or domestication of animals at this time. So whatever is there is what you have, and the natural environment
doesn't produce foodstuffs intensively the way that we
can with modern agriculture, or even primitive agriculture. - [David] Sure, so you
were really reliant on the bounty of the seasons, or how fertile breeding
pairs were the previous year. - [Steve] Exactly, and the other element of this society in this small groups, is movement. There's constant movement. Because resources are limited and because they occur in specific places, you're going to see these
societies moving frequently to take advantage of the
resources that are available at particular places at particular times. - [David] So, preagricultural
people didn't really have cities, is that what you're saying? - [Steve] Correct, there
were no cities in the sense that we would think of a
city of a permanent place of residence at this point in time. - [David] But people
did live in structures. - [Steve] Right, so you would see, the common (chuckles) view
of that is probably the idea of cave people, right, and
there is evidence that people would take shelter, take refuge in caves, but they also would build
primitive versions of huts, tents. - [David] Yeah, we were reading
about a structure in Siberia that was made out of mammoth bones, which is just so metal. So this would hold up the,
like the tusks and the ribs would hold up the ceiling,
and then presumably, we're not sure because all
of this has rotted away, you would have like skin
covering it to keep out the rain. The problem is, we don't
have a lot of artifacts of animal or vegetable material to substantiate these
guesses about the past. You know, the bones remain
and the rocks remain, but the wood, and the skin,
and the plant material has all rotted away. - [Steve] We're left with
whatever is fossilized, whatever is maintained over time. - [David] So, Steve, we're
covering this like immense period of time, we're going
from 250,000 years ago to about 12 to 10,000 years ago. This is like the longest
stretch of human history that humans have experienced. Surely things were not the same throughout the entirety of this period. - [Steve] So remembering that this covers basically the entire world,
and there are many, many people in many different places
in context acting in somewhat similar ways, but
certainly not the same, but one of the things that
we can look at to help track changes over time and see how
these societies are changing, is to look at those
records that do remain. So when we talk about rocks,
for example, we're not just talking about plain old rocks
that we dig out of the ground, we're talking about artifacts. So we can look at how
artifacts change over time as far as what we find at various sites and archaeological digs, and kind of guess at how those societies
might've been changing by the tools that they
were creating and using. - [David] Sure. So here we've got our kinda
pear-shaped, teardrop hand ax, and this is very old, right,
and then we start to see this this tendency towards miniaturization. - [Steve] Right, and so the
tools, what that means is that the tools get smaller and more specific. So we talked earlier,
the hand ax was very much a general-purpose tool that
you could use for all sorts of different activities. When we start getting smaller and more specialized stone tools-- - [David] So let's say this
is like a little spear point, and maybe now, I'm gonna, you
know, mount it in a piece of, like bone or horn, like from
an antler, or a piece of wood, I can just do that, and maybe
like, you know, strap it in with a little bit of animal
or plant fiber to tie it down, make it stick. - [Steve] Right, and that would
be called a composite tool where you're using more than
one material to put together a tool for a specific purpose,
and so the pieces of stone, the artifacts that we have here are referred to as microliths. - [David] Ooh, I like that. Let's break that down, so
micro means very small, and lith, again, means stone. - [Steve] Right, so we have
these very small stones, these microliths, and we
see them being attached to other items, such as sticks and bones to form these composite tools that can be used for
more specific purposes. And one of the things that
this allows people to do, and I should probably stop and say, so we start to see these microliths, again the time, the dating
is not super precise, but probably somewhere
35 to 25,000 years ago, we start to see that. And so now, you have a small stone point attached to a stick, for
example, you can make a spear that you can throw at an animal. You don't have to be
right next to an animal in order to kill it. You can make arrows using bows and arrows that you can reach from
a farther distance. - [David] So you don't
have to go up to that ibex and bop it on the head. - [Steve] Right, it's considerably safer to attack your prey from a distance. - [David] So this
miniaturization of tools, making hunting less dangerous,
enables you to bring in more game, and it enables
you to feed more people, but not as many people
as agriculture would, but there are other technological changes you were telling me about earlier. - [Steve] Correct, so
earlier we mentioned, about 16,000 years ago, we start to see collection of wild grains, so
this is still different than actively growing grains,
they're growing wildly, people go collect them, but
you see tools like sickles, primitive sickles, so stone sickles. - [David] So what is
this implement used for? - [Steve] So, when you use a
sickle, you've knocked down the stalks of grain, so
you can think of it as kind of a very primitive
version of a lawnmower. - [David] Sure. - [Steve] Because the grains that you want are on the top of the grass stock, so you cut those down so
you can get the grains off. And then you have to get
the grain out of its husk, so in order to get the grains
separated from the husks that go around them, they would use what was called a mortar and pestle. - [David] Oh, sure, we
still have those now. I mean, we still have sickles now, but they're very different looking. - [Steve] Yes, and made of
metal, and much sharper. So mortar and pestle is
essentially a block or a bowl, and a small, kind of a
stout stick that you use to break or mash the item
you're trying to get at. - [David] So this is for
removing the husk from like the, the wheat berry, or the grain,
or whatever it is, right? - [Steve] Exactly. - [David] What do we call
those, the endosperm? Inside the seed, this is
where the starchy goodness is. - [Steve] Right, the
husks are not inedible, but not something you
really want to eat, either. - [David] Sure, so people
would grind these grains to liberate the interior of the
seeds, or the wheat berries, or whatever, from the husks to
make them easier to consume. - [Steve] Exactly. - [David] So at some
point, groups of people all over the planet, and
we know this because we can attest it in the archaeological
record, said to one another, what would happen if, instead
of us going out to hunt for these, you know, to go collect these, like this wild barley or this wild wheat, what if we just planted it
closer to where we slept? Wouldn't that be more convenient so we don't have to go so far afield? And that's kind of the birth
of agriculture right there, and I'm sure it didn't play out
in a conversation like that, you know, this took thousands
of years to develop, but this led to the birth of agriculture, and from there, the birth of cities. - [Steve] Right, because
agriculture necessitates you staying near the spot where
you're planting your crops or where you're raising your animals - [David] But, preagricultural
people also built stuff. - [Steve] Right, and it's
happening in different ways and at different rates in
different places around the world. - [David] So there's this
place in modern-day Turkey called Gobekli Tepe,
and it's this monument that was built by nonagricultural people. - [Steve] Right, and to
give some context on that, up until fairly recently, pre-historians, people who study this era
of prehistory, assumed that building of monuments or of
large structures in general was limited to agricultural societies, and so this site was
found in the mid-1990s, is when they discovered it. And it was evident that
this was something built not by a sedentary agricultural
society, but by a group that's still engaged in
hunting and foraging practices. And as best they can tell,
this was probably built about 12,000 years ago. - [David] So Steve, what was Gobekli Tepe? - [Steve] Well, the people who
have found it aren't entirely certain what purpose it served there. Imagining that it served
some sort of ritual purpose in some way, but it's really hard to say because there are no
written records to tell us. So what they've found is,
several hundred limestone pillars arranged in circles, and then
there are images of animals carved into a lot of
these pillars as well, but the reason that they
can assume that this was created by a nonagricultural society-- - [David] Yeah, how do we know? - [Steve] Is that they haven't
found any evidence nearby of agricultural production,
of permanent settlements, so semipermanent settlements,
but that was typical where people would move
from place to place to follow resources, and
they've also found animal bones, indicating that animals
were slaughtered and eaten in the area, but all of
these are from wild animals. So again, the take away
from this discovery is that hunting and foraging societies
could still engage in monumental architecture,
it was not something that only happened in
agricultural societies, it just was more likely with agriculture. - [David] And we'll cover
the birth and the spread of agriculture, but that's
a story for another time.