Term
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Definition
Architecture without an architect, regionally diverse, built of local materials |
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Definition
Ability of a system to absorb disturbance and still retain its basic function |
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Definition
One of the world's largest slums |
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Definition
self built houses, but not vernacular because it is built of thrown away materials. ex: Calcutta, India |
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Term
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Definition
Vernacular structure that utilizes local materials, no wood, concrete blocks, or cement. |
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Term
Inter-generational technology transfer |
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Definition
Knowledge transmission endangered by migration to cities, because no one wants to build vernacular architecture |
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Definition
Bachelor dwellings of rural New Zealand European settler population, western vernacular architecture |
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Definition
Study of the remains of plants cultivated or used by man in ancient times, which have survived in archaeological contexts |
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Term
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Definition
Part of an indian removal act. 1838-1839, thousands of people died |
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Term
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Definition
Cherokees and many other native american groups were not integrated into Anglo-American society, but instead maintain a distinct cultural identity |
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Definition
Displaced 1.3 million Chinese people from traditional dwellings to generate electricity for cities and industries. |
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Term
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Definition
Councils are held here, as well as community activities such as ceremonies and celebrations |
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Term
European introduced foods |
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Definition
peach, cowpea, watermelon, sweet potato |
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Term
Kirtipur, Kathmandu Valley, Nepal |
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Definition
social and economic segregation within cities. Neighborhoods separated by caste. |
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Definition
measures the evenness in distribution of wealth; measures inequities of wealth; high number means gross disparity |
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Definition
Winner of 1981 Aga Kahn Award for urban improvements, but controversial because of negligible community input |
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Term
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Definition
Lowest country on the planet, could be underwater as sea level rises |
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Definition
Nuclear power plant destroyed, spread of toxic materials into land, caused by Tsunami. Natural disaster->man made disaster |
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Definition
Italian city, eruption of Vesuvius, victims couldn't escape quickly enough to survive. Hazard became a disaster because people were unprepared. |
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Definition
Southwestern NC and surrounding areas in the southern Appalachian area. Location of Cherokee school. Eastern band of Cherokess |
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Term
Kibera slum in Nairobi, Kenya |
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Definition
One of the world's largest slums, example of a place where materials accessible to the poor in the city are usually limited to the waste of the affluent. |
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Term
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Definition
self-built dwellings, materials available to the poor are the waste of the affluent, health consequences, seen as eyesores to the public, don;t have a strong claim on the land. |
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Term
Challenge of Urban Habitats |
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Definition
to sustain life and provide equable opportunity in a high density, high differentiated habitat. |
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Term
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Definition
place with over 100,000 people, high density human habitats. |
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Term
Critical mass of talent theory |
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Definition
cities possess critical mass of people that enable them to be engines of innovation and meet challenges of society. |
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Term
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Definition
short lived, deadly events |
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Term
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Definition
the potential to be damaged |
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Term
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Definition
the shifting of tectonic plates, destroys homes, extremely dangerous to human habitats. |
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Term
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Definition
present in sparsely habituated areas in order to stay away from dangerous lava, magma decomposes overtime and turns into rich soil. |
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Term
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Definition
lots of seismic activity, followed earthquake in El Salvador in 2000 |
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Term
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Definition
Causes a lot of flooding which doesn't always drain. Damages places that are affected. |
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Term
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Definition
Caused by seismic activity, more common in pacific regions, building of power plants on the coast makes this extremely dangerous |
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Term
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Definition
Common in the Midwest, harsh and dangerous wints |
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Term
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Definition
absence of water, has huge consequences for the people, bad for humans and animals, depletes food supply |
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Term
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Definition
Example: Super Storm Sandy, streets become rivers, entire neighborhoods can be burned to the ground |
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Term
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Definition
Preparing for the worst, culturally preparing for disasters by preparing, releasing anxiety, and remembering and memorializing what we lost |
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Term
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Definition
made by nature and can't be helped |
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Term
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Definition
Made by man and can be helped |
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Term
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Definition
Humans have the responsibility to treat with care all other lives that share this world. |
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Term
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Definition
Responsible use in protection of natural environment through conservation and sustainable practicies |
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Term
Challenges of the 21st Century |
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Definition
To house an additional 3billion people, thwart loss of cultural diversity |
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Term
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Definition
Reduce vulnerability by building dwellings able to resist tremors, cross bracing, graduated stone sizes |
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Term
Social Identity and persistence of Cherokee Culture |
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Definition
houses paired as summer/winter log cabins, European foods adapted, basket weaving. |
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Term
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Definition
Preserve the language and help Cherokees become literate |
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Term
Kittuwah Mound (The Mother Tower) |
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Definition
origin point of all Cherokees |
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Term
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Definition
A choice to leave a habitat, regardless of how good or bad a situation is |
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Term
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Definition
The only alternative to survive, because of economic chaos, resource depletion, ect. |
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Term
Benefits of large residential groups |
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Definition
Large labor pool, safety, shared resources, community, childcare. |
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Term
Bad things about living in large residential groups |
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Definition
disease spreads easily, conflicts between family, depletion of resources |
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Term
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Definition
living with wife's parents/family after marriage |
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Term
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Definition
Living with husband's parents/family after marriage |
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Term
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Definition
the couple lives on their own after marriage, away from family |
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Term
Chaco Canyon abandonment reasons |
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Definition
drought, political instability, famine, resource depletion, greater opportunities elsewhere |
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Term
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Definition
looking at tree rings for habitat and environmental cues from the past |
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Term
Reasons why Norse may have left Greenland |
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Definition
colder than normal climate so plants died, violent conflict between Inuits, could not staff churches, ivory trade shift |
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Term
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Definition
Viking church in Greenland said to be burned down by Inuits, although there is no proof of this |
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Term
Diamond's argument about Rapa Nui |
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Definition
Islanders depleted the natural resources, committed ecocide. |
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Term
Reasons why people may have left Easter Island |
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Definition
rats, disease, all of the palm trees died |
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Term
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Definition
Sequential layerings of new dwellings on top of old dwellings, becomes moundlike over time |
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Term
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Definition
Neolithic tell in south central Turkey |
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Term
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Definition
an ornament, having the form of the skull of an ox; horns and head of wild bulls; used as decoration to create shrines in Catalhoyuk |
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Term
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Definition
made from palm leaves, perfect shade solution for roofs. Also used by Polynesian people as material to weave sails for their sailboats on their voyage to Western Polyneisa |
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Term
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Definition
composite building material used for making walls, wooden strips are daubed with sticky material usually made of some combination of wet soil or clay and straw. |
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Term
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Definition
large, rectangular housing units with barrel-shaped roofs covered in bark, used by some Native Americans in the Northeast. Inhabited by kinship groups. |
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Term
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Definition
raised above ground with livestock kept underneath-- in southeast Asia, island of Boreno |
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Term
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Definition
lots of people, usually family and extended family, live together. |
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Term
Catalyhoyuk Agglutination |
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Definition
shared walls, but each dwelling is seperate. The dwellings touched. |
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Term
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Definition
group of upright stones, typically aligned with significance to solstice/equinox |
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Term
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Definition
Famous menhir, largest stone is Locmariaquer (75ft) |
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Term
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Definition
remains of communal tombs, upright stones with capstones on top. Built away from settlements. Offerings left, evidence of feasting near the entrance. |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
Eastern Agricultural Complex |
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Definition
group of plants domesticated in North America. |
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Term
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Definition
Circular arrangement of upright posts or stones. Ditch and embankment/berm surrounding. More common in England and Scotland. |
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Term
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Definition
once cut, the edge hydrates at a certain rate. based on this chemical process, we can date obsidian back to when it was originally cut. Used in Easter Island. |
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Term
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Definition
ancestral O'Odam. Canal built around 1000AD, early irrigation canals and settlements in phoenix basin. |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
were called Anasazi. Located in Northeastern Arizona and the four-corners area. |
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Term
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Definition
Big stone structures on Rapa Nui. Full body stone carvings with oversized heads |
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Term
Chaco Canyon Great Houses |
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Definition
stacked large kivas, banded masonry, 2-4 story constructions, an integrated political and religious system, evidence of planned growth and planned architecture. |
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Term
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Definition
A mound of domestic refuse containing shells and animal bone marking the site of a prehistoric settlement, contains the debris of human activity. Made by packrats, seen in Chaco Canyon |
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Term
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Definition
expansion of Inuit speakers across arctic and polar regions around 1000 AD extending all the way to greenland |
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Term
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Definition
a small canoe consisting of a light frame made watertight with animal skins |
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Term
Double-Hulled Sailing Canoe |
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Definition
used by Polynesians, traveled long distances to inhabit new islands |
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Term
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Definition
Hawaiian temple, chiefs and specific occupational groups such as fisherman practiced worship in this temple. Paid homage to the major Hawaiian gods. |
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Term
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Definition
compass with astrological signs to place doorways of Chinese houses. |
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Term
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Definition
geographical region; top point of the triangle is Hawaii, SW corner= New Zealand, and the SE corner= Rapa Nui |
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Term
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Definition
Soft wood trees with palm nuts; not good for building canoes or for rolling moai |
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Term
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Definition
discovers palm nuts of Rapa Nui palm forest. There was no co-evolution with predators, that’s why the trees had no natural defense against them. |
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Term
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Definition
Tells the history of clan and ancestors, creation narratives, exploits of animals with powerful spirits. |
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Term
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Definition
The Fast Runner, movie filmed in Canada about Inuit people |
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Term
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Definition
Ruler of Palenque, he worked on his funerary monument before he died, strengthened ties with sister city of Tikal |
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Term
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Definition
South-central turkey, neolithic tell, painted wall murals, geometric design on walls. Residential burials within dwellings |
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Term
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Definition
Cliff Palace here, Puebloan people from Chaco Canyon relocated here |
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Term
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Definition
Northern New Mexico, dry climate. Pronounced vertical zonation with varying aridity, forests at top of mountain; place of "great houses" as well as kivyas. Hub of dendritic road systems |
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Term
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Definition
characterized as being straight and not following topography |
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Term
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Definition
Located in Polynesian triangle |
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Term
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Definition
Early voyages with Lapita pottery. Leadership in society: vision, oration, navigation skills, competition |
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Term
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Definition
volcano hotspot, active island building new habitat on the edge of lava flow |
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Term
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Definition
Classic Maya city in Guatemala; a place of dieties and ancestors; location of Temple 1. |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Classic Maya capital; roughly 40,000 people; royal court, temple of inscriptions |
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Term
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Definition
temple in japan, multi-generational, highly integrated into the community with temple events. |
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Term
Longhouse in Dartmoor, England |
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Definition
lower sections housed animals while upper section housed the families |
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Term
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Definition
Royal rulers lived in large, stone/brick dwellings; commoners/slaves lived in small, wattle/daub dwellings surrounding the rulers on the outskirts of the central plaza. Certain materials reflect wealth and prestige. |
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Term
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Definition
Using available resources at a rate that allows for their successful regeneration |
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Term
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Definition
limited resources need protection. Make buildings out of resources that can withstand the climate |
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Term
Pan-American domesticates |
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Definition
Bottle gourd, tobacco, cotton, squash, chile peppers, coconut, chocolate |
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Term
South American domesticates |
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Definition
Tomato, peanuts, manioc, pineapple, sweet potato, potato, beans, quinoa |
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Term
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Definition
corn, beans, avocado, vanilla, tomatillo |
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Term
North America Domesticates |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
tendency for settlement nucleation around ruler creates central location |
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Term
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Definition
create and maintain places for the dead. Gives "home" to spirits |
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Term
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Definition
spirits without graves or family connections, serves as temporary resting place |
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Term
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Definition
The natural abode or location of an animal, plant, ect. The place where a plant or animal naturally or normally lives and grows, the typical place of residence |
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Term
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Definition
The physical home of a person |
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Term
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Definition
ability to walk on two feet |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
a way to determine how old an organic substance is by measuring the amount of radioactive isotope is in the substance |
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Term
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Definition
modification of the environment to make it sustainable and comfortable |
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Term
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Definition
23 to 5 million years ago. Megafauna evolove |
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Term
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Definition
Ends with global warm climate shift. Extinction of Australian megafauna. Peopling of the Americas occurs. |
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Term
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Definition
Neolithic era. Current time. |
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Term
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Definition
from the first appearance of artifacts to the end of the last ice age |
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Term
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Definition
earliest forms of humankind, emergence of hand ax. |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
modern Homo Sapiens only existed |
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Term
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Definition
farm animals were first domesticated, and agriculture was introduced |
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Term
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Definition
mud brick round houses, cultivation of wild grain, offerings and festivles, communal storage area. |
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Term
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Definition
rectangular mud brick houses, farming and food storage more privatized |
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Term
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Definition
looks for food, 4.5 million years ago. Pliocene |
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Term
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Definition
Kills animals for food, pleistocene |
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Term
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Definition
cultivates plants but also forages and hunts. End of pleistocene/beginning of holocene |
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Term
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Definition
large scale plant cultivation, holocene |
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Term
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Definition
cattle raising, moving with herds. Holocene |
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Term
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Definition
taking animals to the mountains during the summer and bringing them back to the community in the winter |
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Term
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Definition
the large mammals of a particular region, habitat or geological peroid |
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Term
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Definition
a solitary creature, common in forests of the southeast US where it browsed forests rather than grazed in grasslands, where its counterpart in Africa often found food |
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Term
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Definition
South America and Southern North America, size and mass of VW Beetle. Herbivore. |
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Term
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Definition
North America and Siberia. Ate birch trees, weight: 8 tons |
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Term
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Definition
earliest stone tools recorded, around 2.6 mya. Used during lower paleolithic. |
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Term
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Definition
used by homo erectus. Hand axes, bifacial tool |
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Term
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Definition
neanderthal, various types, such as levallois point |
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Term
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Definition
pointy weapon/spearhead made from rock. used by H. Sapien to kill woolly mammoth |
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Term
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Definition
seed dispersal more difficult, humans can seperate it by hand for controlled planting |
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Term
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Definition
places of cleansing, healing, and connection to larger cosmic forces, such as Tikal Temple in Gobekli Tepe |
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Term
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Definition
what nomadic people eventually transitioned to |
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Term
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Definition
mobile dwelling used by pastoralists from Caspian seas to central Mongolia. Round. |
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Term
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Definition
traditional navajo dwellings, round, built from sticks and then plastered with mud |
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Term
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Definition
ceremonial structure partially underground. circular. Built by southwestern puebloan people |
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Term
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Definition
for winter camps in Northwestern territories. Vernacular architecture. |
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Term
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Definition
spaces in dwellings that are used by different genders; certain areas or regions designed for men or women; ex: yurt, hogan |
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Term
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Definition
built of mud/clay: readily avalable |
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Term
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Definition
complete log house, built in forestry environment with slanted roofs in order to shed snow |
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Term
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Definition
daub walls with thatch roof, stick and clay lattices, thick walls for insulation, high roof to keep house cool |
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Term
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Definition
built on stilts because of monsoon season |
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Term
Moroccan goat haired tent |
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Definition
for nomadic people, easy to take down and set up. Sun block and rain repellant |
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Term
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Definition
snow iced carved blocks to create a small, circular structure |
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Term
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Definition
lots of caves and cave systems, formed from erosion of limestone and other rocks. Upper Sibun River Valley (Belize) |
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Term
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Definition
plant and animals domestication typically coincided with permanent and rectangular dwellings |
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Term
Corbelled domes or vaults |
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Definition
SW france, extremely durable and sturdy. Easily dismantled. |
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Term
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Definition
Discovered H. Erectus in Trinil, Java |
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Term
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Definition
convinced australopithicines were missing link. Taung baby. |
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Term
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Definition
studied Gobekli Tepe, thought it was meeting place for hunters and gatherers. |
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Term
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Definition
drew Neanderthals as being brutish. Sparked stereotype. |
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Term
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Definition
Ardi. 5.5 million years ago, oldest in africa |
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Term
Australopithecus afarnsis |
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Definition
Lucy. 2.9 myo. Second oldest in africa. |
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Term
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Definition
bipedal, 3ft 5in tall, 60lbs, softball sized brain, powerful hands |
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Term
Australopithecus africanus |
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Definition
2-3 million years old, pliocene |
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Term
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Definition
2 million years ago. Bipedal, found in Eurasia and in temperate environments. Hand ax. |
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Term
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Definition
active life, serious injury pattern, accomplished hunters. |
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Term
Homo Sapiens and homo sapiens sapiens |
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Definition
current people, expanded habitat beyond africa |
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Term
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Definition
sacred Iraq landscape, located in fertile crescent. A winter cave for neanderthals. Burials took place here. |
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Term
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Definition
not sure what it was for exactly, but people think it might be ritualistic, monumental. Klaus Schmidt thought it was transitional settlement. |
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Term
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Definition
limestone solution sinkholes in NE Spain. Homonid bones and remains of cave bears and lions. Was this a burial site? |
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Term
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Definition
Mexican location where H. Sapiens lived about 12,000 years ago. |
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Term
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Definition
Cave in China with H. Erectus skeletal remains, 700,000 years ago. |
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Term
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Definition
France, cave paintings of animals. Hall of the Bulls mural. 17,000 years old |
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Term
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Definition
Cave in Spain, paintings first thought to be recent, but actually from about 14,000 to 16,500 years ago |
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Term
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Definition
Modern Iraq, Eastern Turkey, Iran, Syria, Lebanon, Isreal. Place of domestication of wheat. Homo Sapiens. |
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Term
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Definition
sacred landscape for Mayans and place of offerings amidst settlement. Cave system. Homo Sapiens. |
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Term
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Definition
Veracaruz, Mexico. Water shrine, earliest examples of wooden artifacts, greenstone axes, and rubber balls. |
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Term
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Definition
Along east coast of Africa. Many homonid fossils found here dating back to 10 to 4 million years ago |
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Term
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Definition
Homo Erectus found here. 1.7 myo |
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Term
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Definition
Where the almost-complete skeleton of "Lucy" was found |
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Term
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Definition
France. Old, arthritic male Neanderthal found here. |
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Term
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Definition
Sapiens, upper paleolithic. looked a lot like us. Came from Africa. Houses of mammoth bones. |
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Term
Pleistocene to Holocene Transition |
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Definition
warmer, less large animals |
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