People in Catalhoyuk entered their homes through the ________
Roof/Ceiling
Banpo was located in ______
China
The staple crop the Oaxaca grew that would eventually become corn
Maize
The location of Faiyum
Egypt or North Africa
Extra of something
Surplus
Catalhoyuk is located in ________ (Country or Continent)
Turkey/Southwest Asia
The easy-to-grow staple crop farmed by Banpo
Millet
The reason that the Oaxaca people migrated often
Changing Seasons
What archaeologists found as proof of Faiyum housing.
Holes for foundations, storage, clay floors and fireplaces
A place where cultures, new ideas, and new lifestyles spread.
Cultural Hearth
Their new technological advancement that involved taking copper and iron out of the earth.
Metallurgy
The two kinds of buildings built in Banpo
Smaller homes, larger community center building
The location of Oaxaca and what that word means
Mesoamerica (central or middle america)
How did Faiyum come up with strategies to survive?
They borrowed from neighboring cultures.
The crop grown the most and used to feed the most people.
Staple
What Catalhoyuk people did that proves that they had some religious belief
Buried their dead
Banpo's technological advancement was this fabric, and the people of Banpo used this creature to make it.
Silk, silkworms
The extinct plant that Oaxaca people domesticated to be bigger and juicier
Teosinte
The foods that Faiyum grew and raised
Wheat, Barley, Pigs, Sheep
A society that traces their family history using their mothers and women have the most power in the family is a ________ society
Matrilineal
What village came before Catalhoyuk?
NONE!!! They were the first.
The women in Banpo were respected the most, and when they died they were buried with important objects that historians call ______
Burial Goods
Oaxaca people made unique specialized tools out of this material
Stone
The nearby body of water Faiyum used for farming and to share ideas with other communities.
The Nile River
4 out of 5 factors that point to a civilization. (from your concept cluster)
Food and Workers, Technology, Institutions, Writing, Places to Live