The development of agricultural societies led to increased food production, sedentary lifestyles, population growth, social stratification, and the rise of complex societies and civilizations. It also resulted in the domestication of plants and animals, the establishment of permanent settlements, and the development of specialized labor roles.
The early hunter-gatherers did not produce anything, they just ate the things they found in nature. However they made tools to kill animals, and made baskets to store the seeds and roorts, and berries thes had gathered. When people noticed what happened to the sseds that dropped to the ground, they started to plant deliberately and stayed in one place for a longer time to wait for the harvest. A similarity: both the hunter-gatherers and the early farmers shared work and food. however, in the agricultural societies in the Fertile Crescent (e.g. Mesopotamia) soon found necessary to organise work and choose leaders to be more effctive. Just consider how important was co-ordination when they dug canals and built gates.
Events that occurred over 10,000 years ago include the end of the last Ice Age around 11,700 years ago, the domestication of plants and animals leading to the development of agriculture around 10,000 years ago, and the emergence of complex societies in areas like Mesopotamia, Egypt, and the Indus Valley around 5,000-6,000 years ago.
Well farmers for one had a strict diet, with what ever they were growing, this caused not a very helthy nutrietious diet so the foragers were also in a way alot healthier. Secondly if anything happened to the famers crops they were basically screwed since they depended on in earlier societies only a single crop. Foragers could easily move on to a new location if animals got scarce. btw...sorry for the spelling errors >.<
As newcomers spread south in Africa, non-Bantu-speaking hunter-gatherer societies faced displacement, marginalization, and cultural assimilation. They often had to adapt their traditional lifestyles due to pressure from the expanding Bantu-speaking populations and the arrival of new technologies and social structures. Some hunter-gatherer groups were absorbed into Bantu-speaking communities, while others were pushed to more marginal lands.
Caveman Ughlympics happened in 1988.
The first development of agricultural practices is commonly known as the Neolithic Revolution. This period marked the transition from hunter-gatherer societies to settled agricultural communities, leading to significant advancements in human civilization. It happened around 12,000 years ago.
transition from hunter-gatherer societies to settled agricultural communities. This shift led to the development of permanent settlements, the domestication of plants and animals, as well as the emergence of complex social structures and specialized labor roles. Agricultural societies were able to sustain larger populations and support the growth of civilizations.
SimCity Societies happened in 2007.
These societies had disappeared.
As a result of humans settling down in agricultural villages, societies transitioned from a hunter-gatherer lifestyle to permanent settlements, leading to population growth, the development of specialized labor roles, social hierarchies, and the emergence of organized systems of governance. This shift also led to the domestication of plants and animals, the development of new technologies, and the establishment of long-term trade networks.
The early hunter-gatherers did not produce anything, they just ate the things they found in nature. However they made tools to kill animals, and made baskets to store the seeds and roorts, and berries thes had gathered. When people noticed what happened to the sseds that dropped to the ground, they started to plant deliberately and stayed in one place for a longer time to wait for the harvest. A similarity: both the hunter-gatherers and the early farmers shared work and food. however, in the agricultural societies in the Fertile Crescent (e.g. Mesopotamia) soon found necessary to organise work and choose leaders to be more effctive. Just consider how important was co-ordination when they dug canals and built gates.
No factories. The agricultural revolution happened thousands of years before machines.
the war of 1812 happened and the agricultural crisis started in 1820.
As the Earth warmed after the Ice Age, major changes occurred in the way people lived, transitioning from a nomadic lifestyle to settled agricultural communities. This shift led to the development of permanent settlements, farming practices, and the establishment of civilizations. This change marked the beginning of the Neolithic Revolution, which transformed human societies.
Why shouldn't they? That is, what would force them to no longer exist? What I mean is, something would have to happen to either destroy them all, or force the people in them into other societies. No such thing has happened, that's why they still exist. The people in hunting and gathering societies were born into them, and are living the way they were raised to live, the way their parents, and their parents, and so on have lived for a really long time.
One is to invite one to a gathering usually at your home and the other is to say your sorry for what happened at that gathering.
The agricultural revolution happened first in Mesoamerica because of the region's rich biodiversity and fertile lands, which allowed for the cultivation of a wide variety of crops. The indigenous peoples of Mesoamerica also had advanced agricultural techniques, such as terracing and irrigation, that supported the development of complex and productive farming systems. Additionally, the domestication of crops like maize played a significant role in the region's early agricultural advancements.