Maria's Human Geo Blog
Tuesday, January 15, 2013
Monday, January 14, 2013
Wednesday, January 9, 2013
COWS AND WHEAT!
We continued onto part 6 of the video today. All the animals
and crops in the Fertile Crescent spread out into different parts of the world,
completely transforming people’s lives. We talked about how if to places share
the same latitude then they share plants, animals, their length of day, and
their growing resources. The last couple of things we talked about from the
movie had to do with cattle and wheat; in the 16th century people
brought cows to the United States and currently there are about 100 million
cattle in the United States. Wheat: the average American consumes about 20
million tons of wheat per year. One last thing we talked about was why the
people of New Guinea didn't just have other animals other than pigs be brought
to their island, we discussed this and came to the conclusion that they just couldn't because they lived in a rain forest and they couldn't just let cattle graze and
walk around in a closed area, they would have to create an open space for them
but the people of New Guinea couldn't just rip up all their trees and
vegetation that may inhabit other animals and some of the trees also give them
their food. That was all for today!
Tuesday, January 8, 2013
More on the video
We watched more of the video on James Diamond today! In today’s
video we learned that before the industrial revolution people used a horse and
plow and just basically depended on most of their animals. There are about two
million species of animals in the world and out of all those there are only
really fourteen of which we can use and domesticate: goats, sheep, pigs, cows,
horses, donkeys, camels (Bactrian and Arabian), water buffalo llamas,
reindeer, yaks mithans, and ball cattle. We have found that zebras are not
able to be domesticated because of their on-edge nature. Also the people in the
video talk about when they want to control a herd of animals they would look for
the leader of the herd (usually a male) and try to gain control over that
animal and then usually the other animals would do the same. Jared Diamond’s
theory was that some areas were just lucky enough to have the right plants and
animals to help them thrive. In South America there were llamas and in the
Middle East and Europe the other 13 animals reside. Next in the video archaeologists
had discovered a village named Guar that had people living it about 9,000 years
ago and they found evidence that people had been able to build their homes out
of a plaster made out of rhinestone that has to be heated up to 1,000 degrees
to be able to use it like that, but after a while their crops failed to grow so
they had to leave the area. New Guinea had never developed advanced technology
because most of the time they were looking for ways to feed themselves.
Monday, January 7, 2013
Jared Diamond's research
Today in human geography we continued to watch a video about
Jared Diamond and the New Guineans. James Diamond talks about how all great
civilizations have three things in common and they are: advanced technology, a
large population (several dozen at least), and a well-organized work forced. People
back then had to have one of two jobs; either they were a hunter or a gatherer-
they shared their labor. Jared studied the have and have not’s; this was the idea
of developed vs. undeveloped for example: if you knew a way to find food, get
water, and stay healthy than you were a have, if you couldn't do any of these
things you would be a have not. We also found out that Jared had to search
through history back to a time when everyone was equal, like when everyone
shared the same way of life. In Papua New Guinea people still hunt and gather,
13,000 years ago people in the Middle East lived this way, but the people had
to rely more on gathering than hunting because hunting was unpredictable. The women
did most of the gathering, in Papua New Guinea there is a tree called the Sago tree
that the people process because in the center there is a pulp that they can
harvest into dough that they can eat, but it isn't very nutritious. One Sago
tree only holds about 70 pounds of the pulp and it usually takes three days to
process, they also eat some cereal grasses that grow there like barley and
wheat; wheat and barley was also native in the Middle East. 12,000 years ago there were ice age like
conditions and there was a drought that lasted for 1,000 years. Next in the
video we learned that there was a village called Drah and it was the oldest
village, an archaeological dig was set up and they discovered a very well
structured building, it was found to be a granary; this was a place where the
villagers could store their crops without them getting dried out or collecting
moisture and spoiling, this was the center of the village and it was also the
first community. The people located
themselves near a water source and grew crops; these people where the first
farmers and they learned how to control the flow of the food. After a while
people began to learn different things and they had new jobs that they could do
like weaving baskets, making clothes and making food; this is when civilization
took off. Eventually people learned how to control plants (domestication) In
China rice was grown, in America there was corn, squash, in Africa there was
sorghum, millet, and yams. In the highlands of New Guinea they had what Jared
Diamond called “Geographic luck” , but the crops there spoiled very quickly and
most of their food didn’t have a high nutrition level so sometimes people would
just eat giant spiders. At about 9,000 years ago people( mostly farmers)
learned how to domesticate animals and use them to improve their society; goats
and sheep were the first to be tamed and the people could milk the goats and
use the sheep’s wool for clothing, with the help of animal domestication a good
system was formed. That was it from the
video today!
Jared Diamond's research
Today in human geography we continued to watch a video about
Jared Diamond and the New Guineans. James Diamond talks about how all great
civilizations have three things in common and they are: advanced technology, a
large population (several dozen at least), and a well-organized work forced. People
back then had to have one of two jobs; either they were a hunter or a gatherer-
they shared their labor. Jared studied the have and have not’s; this was the idea
of developed vs. undeveloped for example: if you knew a way to find food, get
water, and stay healthy than you were a have, if you couldn't do any of these
things you would be a have not. We also found out that Jared had to search
through history back to a time when everyone was equal, like when everyone
shared the same way of life. In Papua New Guinea people still hunt and gather,
13,000 years ago people in the Middle East lived this way, but the people had
to rely more on gathering than hunting because hunting was unpredictable. The women
did most of the gathering, in Papua New Guinea there is a tree called the Sago tree
that the people process because in the center there is a pulp that they can
harvest into dough that they can eat, but it isn't very nutritious. One Sago
tree only holds about 70 pounds of the pulp and it usually takes three days to
process, they also eat some cereal grasses that grow there like barley and
wheat; wheat and barley was also native in the Middle East. 12,000 years ago there were ice age like
conditions and there was a drought that lasted for 1,000 years. Next in the
video we learned that there was a village called Drah and it was the oldest
village, an archaeological dig was set up and they discovered a very well
structured building, it was found to be a granary; this was a place where the
villagers could store their crops without them getting dried out or collecting
moisture and spoiling, this was the center of the village and it was also the
first community. The people located
themselves near a water source and grew crops; these people where the first
farmers and they learned how to control the flow of the food. After a while
people began to learn different things and they had new jobs that they could do
like weaving baskets, making clothes and making food; this is when civilization
took off. Eventually people learned how to control plants (domestication) In
China rice was grown, in America there was corn, squash, in Africa there was
sorghum, millet, and yams. In the highlands of New Guinea they had what Jared
Diamond called “Geographic luck” , but the crops there spoiled very quickly and
most of their food didn’t have a high nutrition level so sometimes people would
just eat giant spiders. At about 9,000 years ago people( mostly farmers)
learned how to domesticate animals and use them to improve their society; goats
and sheep were the first to be tamed and the people could milk the goats and
use the sheep’s wool for clothing, with the help of animal domestication a good
system was formed. That was it from the
video today!
Saturday, January 5, 2013
James Diamond and his world famous book!
Jared Diamond was born on December 10th 1937 and
he was born in Boston Massachusetts into a Jewish family. He is a professor at U.C.L.A and he teaches Geography.
Jared is also an author, an ornithologist (the studying of birds), and he is
also an anthropologist (the study of cultures). As an author he won the Pulitzer
prize for his book Guns, germs, and steel.
He is now married with twins and he has always been interested in birds so he
went out to Papua New Guinea Island to do some more research and while he was
there he discovered that unlike our modern civilization, the people of Papua
New Guinea do not have a developed civilization at all really. James Diamond’s
theory was- why did some civilizations advance and why others didn't some
people like the people in Papua New Guinea, still live the way people did
13,000 years ago.
One of his most famous books is Guns, Germs, and Steel. This book tries to explain how the Eurasians
were able to conquer so many places; this book also explains why guns, germs,
and steel were a main factor in their victories. In this book James talks about
how important the locations were for these conquerors because if they found a
place where there was no sickness they would be ok, also if they found a place
where crops could be grown and there were animals for them they would thrive,
becoming stronger and stronger. Eventually these people would become more
civilized, making weapons, farming and using other natural resources making
them highly evolved.
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