Farming developed first in the Fertile Crescent of Mesopotamia, where gatherers of wild barley, rye, and wheat began to cultivate these cereals. (1.2.A)
These communities increasingly discovered that “slashing and burning” the vegetation of exhausted fields rejuvenated those fields for future planting. (1.2.A)
Animal domestication also became the basis of pastoralism, especially in grasslands and areas not suitable for farming. Pastoralists were nomadic, and they exchanged animal products for the food and materials produced in farming communities. (1.2.A)
As groups became more sedentary, they also became less egalitarian and more hierarchical, and people responsible for the management and allocation of food resources had the greatest social importance. (1.2.B)
classified by various criteria into successive levels
As groups became more sedentary, they also became less egalitarian and more hierarchical, and people responsible for the management and allocation of food resources had the greatest social importance. (1.2.B)
the act of distributing or apportioning according to a plan
As groups became more sedentary, they also became less egalitarian and more hierarchical, and people responsible for the management and allocation of food resources had the greatest social importance. (1.2.B)
Technological innovations and human selection of specific seeds and animals impacted the environment through deforestation and the loss of biodiversity. (1.2.B)
Technological innovations and human selection of specific seeds and animals impacted the environment through deforestation and the loss of biodiversity. (1.2.B)
Seven Neolithic farming communities, all cultivating different crops, arose independently outside the Fertile Crescent: Sudanic Africa (sorghum), West Africa (yams), East Asia (millet and soybean), Southeast Asia (rice), Papua New Guinea (bananas), Mesoamerica (maize), and the Andes (potatoes). (1.2.C)