Early Americas
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Transcript Early Americas
North America, Central America,
and South America
Most
scientist and historians believe that the
first Americans arrived via a land bridge.
• The bridge was called Beringia, it was during the
last Ice Age in which the frozen water caused a drop
in sea level which created a bridge over the gap that
is today known as the Bering Straight. (p. 237)
• The Ice Age that is believed to allow this to happen
lasted from roughly 1,900,000 – 10,000 BC.
Early
Americans were thought to have
crossed following large game like
bison and mammoth.
Hunter-Gatherers
Early
Americans migrate from Alaska,
through Central America, all the way
to the Southern tip of South America.
When
early Americans in today’s Central
Mexico discovered they could raise crops
like MAIZE, squash, gourds, beans,
avacados, and chiles; they began to
abandon the hunter-gatherer lifestyle.
Maize
– is a variety of corn that
became the most important crop to
early Americans.
Could
very
easily feed an
entire family,
with minimal
effort.
Also
known as “Central America”
Olmec
Zapotec
Mesoamerica’s
Lived
first known civilization
in the jungles of Southern Mexico
Know
as the “mother culture” of
Mesoamerica, because it influenced all
civilizations that are formed after it in
Mesoamerica.
Hot
unforgiving climate with up to 100
inches of rainfall annually.
The
rainforest climate they lived in
provided many raw materials like salt,
tar, clay, wood, and rubber.
The
hills to the north of their civilization
provided stone with which they built
enormous stone head carvings.
Built
large earthen mounds and pyramids
believed to be a burial mound for a great
Olmec ruler. (100 ft. tall pyramid, not any
where near the size of Egypt’s pyramids).
Believed
to have worshiped a jaguar
like creature due to the discovery of
several half-jaguar half-human stone
sculptures and carvings.
Lived
in southwest Mexico in an area
called the Oaxaca Valley
The
Oaxaca Valley has extremely fertile
soil, a very mild climate, and enough
rainfall to support agriculture.
Built
large stone statues and carvings
hinting at their contact and influence of
the Olmec culture.
500
BC the Zapotec built a large city
named Monte Alban which housed
15,000 to 25,000 people.
Monte
Alban was the first urban center in
the Americas, connecting large
pyramids, towers, and palaces made of
stone.
Aztecs
Maya
Inca
Ch. 16 e-mail N.A. student powerpoint
http://educationportal.com/academy/lesson/mesoamericancivilizations-the-olmecs-to-cortes.html#lesson