67
Diggin g Up the Past

Digging Up the Past

  • Upload
    orsen

  • View
    33

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Digging Up the Past. Sumerian Astrology Tablet About 2500 B.C. Found in Iraq. Pitcher with built in strainer Assyrian Colony Period 1900-1750 B.C. Clovis Point Utah Weapon; flaked 6 inches. Mid Neolithic (5000 B.C.) Needles Ka -rub (Tibet). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Digging Up the Past

Digging Up the Past

Page 2: Digging Up the Past

• Sumerian Astrology Tablet

• About 2500 B.C.

• Found in Iraq

Page 3: Digging Up the Past

• Pitcher with built in strainer

• Assyrian Colony Period

• 1900-1750 B.C.

Page 4: Digging Up the Past

• Clovis Point• Utah• Weapon; flaked• 6 inches

Page 5: Digging Up the Past

• Mid Neolithic (5000 B.C.)• Needles • Ka-rub (Tibet)

Page 6: Digging Up the Past

The strange object in the bottom of this pool in the men's baths is an early immersion heater. The circular

piece in the center was heated from below.

Page 7: Digging Up the Past

This picture shows the Roman equivalent of a fast food restaurant. The counter has several earthenware pots fixed into it which would have contained hot food. Being earthenware, the pots would have

helped conserve the heat. The front step of the shop has a groove in which slid the concertina shutters that were shut when the shop

closed.

Page 8: Digging Up the Past

The Greek ekklesiasterion was the council meeting arena. Being seated around a circular

arena nobody was at the front.

Page 9: Digging Up the Past

Deep ruts in the surface of the road show the result of many years of traffic. From the look of it the carts that used this

street must have been built to a standard wheel span.

Page 10: Digging Up the Past

• Rosetta Stone• Found in

Rosetta, Egypt in 1799 by French soldiers

• 196 B.C. • 2 languages:

Greek and Egyptian

Page 11: Digging Up the Past

• Stone Seals• Indus River Valley• 3500-1800 B.C.

Page 12: Digging Up the Past

• Round School Tablet• Nippur, Babylonia• About 2000 B.C.

Page 13: Digging Up the Past

Archaeology is the study

of the remains of past human

life and cultures

Page 14: Digging Up the Past

Archaeologistsomeone who tries to

figure out what life was like in the ancient past by looking at the remains of

ancient people - their fossils and their artifacts

Page 15: Digging Up the Past

Anthropologist• study humans and other human-like creatures known as hominids

• they compare the bones, of these creatures to one another, looking for changes in brain size, and posture

Page 16: Digging Up the Past

Artifacts• An archaeologist must know the different between an artifact and a fossil. 

• Fossils are the remains of living things (plants, animals, people), not of things that were made. 

• Artifacts are the remains of things that were made, not the remains of living things

Page 17: Digging Up the Past

Tools• trowels, brushes, spoons, dental picks, sieves, saws, dustpans, and wheelbarrows

• digging at a site is slow and careful work; each grid must be searched very carefully

Page 18: Digging Up the Past

Excavation• To study archeological remains, archeologists must excavate

• Excavate – dig into the earth to uncover remains of the past

Page 19: Digging Up the Past

Dating Artifacts

Page 20: Digging Up the Past

Carbon 14 Testing• 1946 – Willard

Frank Libby• Discovered that all living things contained a radioactive element (Carbon 14)

• Won Nobel Peace Prize in Chemistry

Page 21: Digging Up the Past

Carbon – 14 Dating• All living things on Earth contain

Carbon (some is radioactive)• When these life forms die, they

stop taking in new carbon. • The carbon in their bodies at the

time of their death will remain in their bodies until they decompose, or if they become fossilized

Page 22: Digging Up the Past

• Radioactive carbon decays at a known rate

• scientists can look at the amount of decay in a fossil’s radioactive carbon, and determine a relative date

• Radiocarbon dating is only effective for objects and fossils that are less than 50,000 years old

• always improving; best methods that we have at this time.

Page 23: Digging Up the Past

1832 – Christian J. Thomsen (Danish)

divided historyinto 3 ages based on materials that were

used (the first)• Stone Age• Bronze Age• Iron Age

Page 24: Digging Up the Past

Scientist realized that material used was not as important as how

they got their food, so history was divided into

2 periods.• Hunter-gatherers• Farmers (food producers)

Page 25: Digging Up the Past

Archaeological

Finds

Page 26: Digging Up the Past

1700• Italian farmers discovered they were living on ancient Roman city of Herculaneum

•Led to discovery of Pompeii (50 years later)

Page 27: Digging Up the Past

Ancient City of Herculaneum

Page 28: Digging Up the Past

This photo gives an idea of the extent of the excavations, which cover only about 1/4 of the original town. In the distance can be seen the present-day town

of Ercolano which has been built on the volcanic material which covered the Roman town.

Page 29: Digging Up the Past

This metal bath tub shows how little the design of bathtubs has changed in over

2000 years.

Page 30: Digging Up the Past

These columns show a common method used by the Romans. A brick pillar is

rendered and the rendering partly

shaped to look like a fluted marble column. Notice

how the columns have been painted.

Page 31: Digging Up the Past

Many of the buildings in Herculaneum have beautifully frescoes and mosaics. This mosaic has survived. The

decorations on the walls around it have not fared so well.

Page 32: Digging Up the Past

Painted on a wall is this price list (or perhaps it's a poster advertising the

range of wines for sale).

Page 33: Digging Up the Past

The grey right hand wall of the excavation in this view of part of the back of the villa clearly shows the depth to which it was buried.

Page 34: Digging Up the Past

Pompeii

Page 35: Digging Up the Past

Pompeii: Near the forum, stands the Temple of Jupiter, chief of the Roman gods. Behind it, in the haze, looms the bulk of Mount Vesuvius.

Page 36: Digging Up the Past

The smallest of the 3 temples is dedicated to sown on some plans as the temple of Ceres, on

others as the temple of Athena.

Page 37: Digging Up the Past

The Temple of Poseidon in the background, the more delicate temple of Hera in the

foreground.

Page 38: Digging Up the Past

From the front of the

larger Temple of Poseidon you can see the remains

of the internal walls and columns.

Page 39: Digging Up the Past

Pompeii had several public performance spaces. This is the small theatre, or Odeon, which was a venue for musical events. Without

efficient artificial lighting performances took place during the hours of daylight. The whole arena could be covered with a fabric roof to

protect the audience from the hot sun (or the rain).

Page 40: Digging Up the Past

The Basilica, or courthouse, in

Pompeii had been damaged in an

earthquake some years before the

eruption of 79 CE. It was being rebuilt

by gangs of workmen. Each

gang had their own column. They had all reached about the same height when work was interrupted...

Page 41: Digging Up the Past

Pompeii was built on the side of a hill. Every house had a supply of piped water but there was no sewage system. Sewage and other household

water was simply emptied into the street which, according to our guide, were constantly running

with water. The pedestrian walkways are high and each street had stepping stones to let people get

across!

Page 42: Digging Up the Past

Flour mill - seen in one of

the bakery shops in

Pompeii. Grain was ground into flour when two

slaves turned the top half,

capstan-style.

Page 43: Digging Up the Past
Page 44: Digging Up the Past

Why is this important?

We learned how

ancient Romans lived!

Page 45: Digging Up the Past

1799• French soldiers discovered the Rosetta Stone

• Discovered Rosetta Stone in Rosetta now called Rashid

• Created – 196 B.C.

Page 46: Digging Up the Past

• The Rosetta Stone is a text written by a group of priests in Egypt to honour the Egyptian pharaoh. It lists all of the things that the pharaoh has done that are good for the priests and the people of Egypt

• http://www.ancientegypt.co.uk/writing/rosetta.html

Page 47: Digging Up the Past

Rashid

Page 48: Digging Up the Past

Why is this important?• Scholars had not been able to decipher Egyptian writings

• Stone was written in Greek and Egyptian

• Scholars were able to use the Greek writing to translate the Egyptian

• Gained information about ancient Egyptians

Page 49: Digging Up the Past

Catal Huyuk

Page 50: Digging Up the Past
Page 51: Digging Up the Past
Page 52: Digging Up the Past
Page 53: Digging Up the Past
Page 54: Digging Up the Past
Page 55: Digging Up the Past
Page 56: Digging Up the Past
Page 57: Digging Up the Past
Page 58: Digging Up the Past
Page 59: Digging Up the Past
Page 60: Digging Up the Past
Page 61: Digging Up the Past

Gobekli

Tepe

Page 62: Digging Up the Past
Page 63: Digging Up the Past
Page 64: Digging Up the Past
Page 65: Digging Up the Past
Page 66: Digging Up the Past
Page 67: Digging Up the Past