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AP World History Chapter 2 Flashcards

All of the Vocabulary for Chapter 2 of Ways of the World

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4766159366TeosinteThe wild ancestor of maize. (pron. tay-oh- SIN-tay)0
4766159367Stateless SocietiesVillage-based agricultural societies, usually organized by kinship groups, that functioned without a formal government apparatus.1
4766159368"Secondary Products Revolution"A term used to describe a series of technological changes that began c.a. 4000 B.C.E., as people began to develop new uses for their domesticated animals, exploiting a revolutionary new source of power.2
4766159369Pastoral SocietyA human society that relies on domesticated animals rather than plants as the main source of food; pastoral nomads lead their animals to seasonal grazing grounds rather than settling permanently in a single location.3
4766159370Native AustraliansOften called "Aboriginals" (from the Latin ab origine, the people who had been there "from the beginning"), the natives of Australia continued (and to some extent still continue) to live by gathering and hunting, despite the transition to agriculture in nearby lands.4
4766159371Mesopotamiafirst civilization located between the Tigris & Eurphrates Rivers in present day Iraq; term means "land between the rivers;" Sumerian culture5
4766159372JerichoSite of an important early agricultural settlement of perhaps 2,000 people in present-day Israel.6
4766159373IntensificationThe process of getting more in return for less; for example, growing more food on a smaller plot of land.7
4766159374HorticultureHoe-based agriculture, typically of early Agrarian societies.8
4766159375Fertile CrescentRegion sometimes known as Southwest Asia that includes the modern states of Iraq, Syria, Israel/Palestine, and Southern Turkey; the earliest home of agriculture.9
4766159376End of the Last Ice AgeA process of global warming that began around 16,000 years ago and ended about 5,000 years later, with the earth enjoying a climate similar to that of our own time; the end of the Ice Age changed conditions for human beings, leading to increased population and helping to pave the way for agriculture.10
4766159377DomesticationThe taming and changing of nature for the benefit of humankind.11
4766159378DiffusionThe gradual spread of agricultural techniques without extensive population movement.12
4766159379ChiefdomA societal group governed by a chief who typically relies on generosity, ritual status, or charisma rather than force to win obedience from the people.13
4766159380CatalhuyukAn important Neolithic site in what is now Turkey. (pron. cha-TAHL-hoo-YOOK)14
4766159381CahokiaAn important agricultural chiefdom of North America that flourished around 1100 C.E.15
4766159382Broad Spectrum DietArcheologists' term for the diet of gathering and hunting societies, which included a wide array of plants and animals.16
4766159383Bantu MigrationThe spread of Bantu speaking peoples from their homeland in what is now Southern Nigeria or Cameroon to most of Africa, in a process that started 3000 B.C.E. and continued for several millennia.17
4766159384BantuAn African-language family whose speakers eventually became the dominant culture of eastern and southern Africa, thanks to their agricultural techniques and, later, their ironworking skills.18
4766159385BanpoA Chinese archaeological site, where the remains of a significant Neolithic village have been found.19
4766159386AustronesianAn Asian-language family whose speakers gradually became the dominant culture Philippines, Indonesia, and Pacific Islands, thanks to their mastery of agriculture.20
4766159387Agricultural RevolutionAlso known as the Neolithic Revolution, this is the transformation of human (and world) existence caused by the deliberate cultivation of particular plants and the deliberate taming and breeding of particular animals.21
47661716858000 BCE humans domesticated plants and animalsfarming= food + animals=fertilizer = agricultural surplus22
4766176332Sedentary lifestylesettle down, more food= specialized lives= tech and religious beliefs23
4766183865Leading socio-economic class divisionsmen- farming, women-child based24
4766184540laws and political ruleb/c a lot of people and men took over b/c they had more down time25
4766187788After ice ageAgricultural villages- mesoptoamia, nile river valley, sub-saharen Africa, indus river valley, yellow river, papua new guinea, Mesoamerica, andes26
4766192212Pastoralismreliable and abundant food supplies27
4766194192technological innovationsagriculture production, trade, metallurgy28
4766198246agrarian societiessociety whose economy is based on producing and maintaining crops and farmland29

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