Anthropology Ch 8
One precondition for the emergence of food production was the movement of people, animals, and products __________________
between environmental zones
Which term refers to the movement, when the Ice Age ended, in which forager began creating a more generalized economy that didn't rely on large animals?
broad- spectrum revolution
In the Middle East, sedentary village life developed before which of the following?
herding farming
The path from foraging to food production was followed _________________
in at least seven world areas
The formation of states in the Middle East was made possible by the developments of
irrigation techniques
Compared to wild plants, domesticated plants ___________
have larger seeds
Middle Easterners were living in Vibrant cities by ________________
5500 B.P.
Permanent architectural features existed in Natufian settlements such as ______________
Abu Hureyra, Syria
What is another name for the Neolithic Revolution?
Agricultural Revolution
Manioc
Cassava; a tuber domesticated in South American lowlands
Maize
Corn; domesticated in highland Mexico
T/F : In the New World, there were many large animals available for domestication
False
Mesoamerica
Middle America, including Mexico, Guatemala, and Belize
Sedentism
Settled (sedentary) life; preceded food production in the Old World and followed it in the New World
Vertical economies thrive in regions with zones that vary in which of the following aspects?
altitude rainfall vegetation
Mesolithic
Tool-making tradition between Upper Paleolithic and Neolithic, based on very small stone tools-microliths
Natufians
Widespread Middle Eastern culture, dated to between 12,500 and 10,500 B.P.; subsisted on intensive wild cereal collecting and gazelle hunting and had year-round villages.
Compared to the Middle East, food production reached western Europe _____________
about 3,000 years later
What is the term used to describe the rich, fertile soil that rivers and streams deposit?
alluvial
Early cultivation began as an attempt to ______________
copy the growth of wild grains
Which of the following became widespread after food- producing states came into existence?
crime slavery human sacrifice
Food production increased the rate of what?
degradation of environments
In both northern and southern China, food production supported large villages by 7500 B. P., ______________
despite dramatic differences in temperatures and rainfall
The only animal domesticated throughout the New World was the ____________
dog
Which of the following occurred as Europe warmed after the Ice Age?
dogs were domesticated as retrievers new hunting techniques were developed the smoking and salting of meat and fish became increasingly important
Which of the following were domesticated in the New World?
ducks turkeys dogs
In recent times, Anthropologists who have studied hunting and gathering groups have found which of the following to be true?
early retirement was optional child labor was unknown
States are social and political units that feature which of the following?
extreme contrasts of wealth central government social classes
The changes that occurred between 9000 and 8000 B. P. in the form and phytolith size of South American seeds suggests that _________________
farmers were selecting certain characteristics in plants for cultivation
After farmers burn to remove weeds, they use the ash as a (n) ________________
fertilizer
Nabta Playa, one of the earliest known Neolithic settlements in Egypt, was located in a basin that ________________
filled with water
Which of the following led to new kinds of wheat and barley?
genetic recombinations human selection mutation
Holocene
geological epoch beginning around 11,700 B.P.; the transition from foraging to food production took place during the early Holocene
Why was the Neolithic Revolution significant?
it marked the transition to permanent settlements
In comparison to the diets of foragers, food producers' diets are generally ______________
less nutritious less varied lower in proteins
According to many archaeologists, new subsistence strategies were most often adopted by Middle Easterners ___________
living in areas where wild foods were less abundant
As people began to select plants to cultivate, domesticated plants began to ____________
lose their natural seed- dispersal mechanisms
Which of the following spread as food production spread during the Neolithic?
malaria smallpox
The characteristic tool type of the Mesolithic was the _________________
microlith
Compared to foragers, food producers tend to have _______________
more children
Anthropologists have come to believe that foragers have an excellent knowledge of what?
plant and animal reproduction
After 15,000 B.P., foragers turned to species that ________________
quickly and prolifically reproduced
Most Eurasian crops spread ____________
rapidly, from east to west
Social stratification increased as a result of food production, largely because _______________
resources were no longer common goods
Early farming in China was based on the production of which of the following?
rice millet
Dependence on which of the following are considered archeological evidence of the presence of Neolithic cultures?
sedentary life cultivation ceramic vessels
Caprine domestication involved which of the following?
sheep goats
As they were domesticated, animals generally became ____________
smaller
According to molecular and genetic studies, maize domestication first took place in _____________
southwestern Mexico
The Natufians were able to establish year- round villages before domestication as a result of ______________
the availability of wild cereals for half the year
Food production was an outcome not only of the spread of cereal grains outside their natural habitat but also of ______________
the need to feed a growing human population
Which of the following likely increased as maize became domesticated?
the number of kernels per cob the average cob size the number of cobs per stalk
Nabta Playa's significance as a regional ceremonial center is suggested by __________________
the presence of nine large stone slabs
How did humans spread cereal grains outside their natural habitats?
trade between zones migration
Compared to those of the Old World, the earliest domesticated plants of the New World ___________________
were developed at about the same time
Which of the following were the main caloric staples of early Native American farmers?
white potatoes maize manioc
Teosinte
wild grass; apparent ancestor of maize; also called teocentli
Anthropologists refer to the African practice of using cattle for their milk and blood rather than for their meat (except on ceremonial occasions) as the ___________
"African cattle complex"
Neolithic
"New Stone Age," coined to describe techniques of grinding and polishing stone tools; the first cultural period in a region in which the first signs of domestication are present
broad- spectrum revolution
Period beginning around 20,000 B.P. in the Middle East and 12,000 B.P. in Europe, during which a wider range, or broader spectrum, of plant and animal life was hunted, gathered, collected, caught, and fished; revolutionary because it led to food production.
By 10,000 B. P., hunting, gathering, and fishing populations extended to which of the following formerly glaciated lands?
Scandinavia the British Isles