Paleolithic: Difference between revisions
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==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||
* [[Stone Age]] | * [[Stone Age]] | ||
* [[ | * [[Modern Man]] | ||
* [[Mesolithic]] | * [[Mesolithic]] | ||
* [[Neolithic]] | * [[Neolithic]] |
Latest revision as of 14:23, 28 January 2021
Paleolithic = "old" (paleo) "stone" (lithic)
>> article to do
Wikipedia entry link here (format: [weblink title])
Notes[edit | edit source]
Section Titles[edit | edit source]
- bulleted info
- bulleted info
- bulleted info
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Section Titles[edit | edit source]
- bulleted info
- bulleted info
- bulleted info
- bulleted info
Language[edit | edit source]
- developed during Cro Magnum >> ??
Paleolithic Technology[edit | edit source]
Fire[edit | edit source]
- development
- uses
- protection
- hardening tools
- food presevation
- honey collecting
Boats[edit | edit source]
Fishing Techniques[edit | edit source]
- Fishing doesn't start until Cro-Magnm >> verify
- requires nets, baits
- boats
Hunting Tools & Weapons[edit | edit source]
Calendars & Math[edit | edit source]
- See here for Paleolithic Tally Sticks
- todo >>
Art & Religion[edit | edit source]
cave painting[edit | edit source]
- ocurs across prehistoric inhabitation
- see Cave Painting entry at wikipeida for description and dates across the world
- techniques
- subjects
- purpose
- theories of art or communication
- art or ritual theory
- to assist in the hunt (ritual)
- communication & economic function
- survival tool
- animal populations, especially herd animals, varied periodically
- cave paintings to communicate crucial information
- caves as place for exchange and information for periodic gatherings or for those passing through at different times, and marking place and time
- pictured animals not necessarily the type hunted at the cave location suggests communication and education role
- migratory birds depicted
- exaggeration of antlers and fatty parts in depictions suggests informational purpose
- economic theory supported by disappearance of cave painting with climate warming and ecological change that led from reliance on migratory herd kill of Ice Age tundra period to woodland and warming period animal dispersal and abundance
- reference: Mithen, Steven, "After the Ice" pp. 148-149
- survival tool
sculpture[edit | edit source]
burial[edit | edit source]
medicine[edit | edit source]
rituals[edit | edit source]
Modern Examples[edit | edit source]
- North Sentinelese Islanders
- see article "Stone Age tribe kills fishermen who strayed on to island," London Telegraph, Feb 8, 2006
- traditional societies of the Upper Nile: notes from "The Wild River" video
- Morsi
- herders & hunter-gatherers
- semi-sendentary
- lip tattooing and earlobe stretching
- social solidarity & common purpose
- Morsi
- Avandi
- slash & burn technology
- lifestyle persistence for 20,000 years
- Samburu
- warriors: drink cow milk and camel blood
- use beads to measure value of cattle
- herding
- Dinkas:
- "people of the cow"
- social structures built around cattle
- names, values,
- only slaughter cattle for sacrifice
- social structures
- ceremonies
External Articles[edit | edit source]
- Journey of Mankind: animated time-map of spread of modern humans from 160,000 BC to 12,000 BC. Excellent visual teaching tool!
- NOAA Modern Human Timeline
- bulleted link to web pages/ articles
See Also[edit | edit source]
- Stone Age
- Modern Man
- Mesolithic
- Neolithic
- Paleolithic and Neolithic Comparison
- bulleted link to other related internal or web articles
- bulleted link to other related internal or web articles