Firestarter
It
Carrie
The Shining
Cujo
100

Indigenous peoples of the Australian continent with tens of thousands of years of cultural continuity.

Aboriginal Australians

100

The breeding of plants or animals to enhance desirable traits.

Artificial selection

100

Domesticated felines valued for rodent control and companionship; closely linked to early grain storage societies.

CATS!!!

100

A product derived from cacao, first cultivated in Mesoamerica and often used ritually or as currency.

Chocolate

100

Domesticated from wolves; first animals tamed by humans, used for hunting, herding, and companionship.

DOGS!!!

200

Human waste materials; accumulation of refuse is tied to permanent settlements and urban life.

Garbarge

200

A staple cereal domesticated in Mesoamerica from its ancestor, teosinte.

Maize

200

The cultivation of land and domestication of plants and animals for food.

Farming

200

Searching for and gathering wild food such as plants, fruits, and animals.

Foraging

200

A region in the Middle East where agriculture and the earliest civilizations first emerged.

Fertile Crescent

300

The exchange of goods, services, and ideas between people and regions.

Trade

300

A controlled burning technique used by Aboriginal Australians to manage ecosystems and encourage regrowth.

Firestick farming

300

A vital element in agriculture, necessary for plant growth and soil health.

Nitrogen

300

Animals considered pests, often drawn to human settlements and linked to disease.

Vermin

300

Also known as yam daisy; a native Australian root crop harvested by Aboriginal Australians.

Murnong

400

Symbolic figures from the Book of Revelation representing conquest, war, famine, and death.

Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse

400

In the book, It, which character says, "I am the eater of worlds, child."

Pennywise

400

The retention of juvenile traits into adulthood; observed in both human evolution and animal domestication.

Neoteny

400

A historical region of Central America home to advanced pre-Columbian civilizations and the site where maize was engineered.

Mesoamerica

400

Stephen King based his book, Cujo, on a dog that he once saw at someone's house. What breed of dog is  Cujo?

Saint Bernard

500

A prehistoric people of the Levant (c. 15,000–11,500 years ago) who were early sedentary foragers and possibly proto-farmers.

Natufians

500

A wild grass native to Mesoamerica; the wild ancestor of maize.

Teosinte

500

Literally “maize field,” it is a traditional farming system from Mesoamerica featuring companion plants grown together at the same time.


Milpa

500

Volcanic glass valued for toolmaking and trade due to its sharpness and glossy finish.

Obsidian

500

The shift from hunting and gathering to farming and permanent settlements that began around 10,000 BCE.

The shift from hunting and gathering to farming and permanent settlements that began around 10,000 BCE.

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