7th millennium BC


 

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Millennia: 8th millennium BC - 7th millennium BC - 6th millennium BC

During the 7th millennium BC, agriculture spreads from Anatolia to the Balkans.

World population is essentially stable at around 5 million people, living mostly widely scattered across the globe in small hunting-gathering tribes. In the agricultural communities of the Middle East, the cow is domesticated and use of pottery grows common, spreading to Europe and South Asia, and the first metal (gold and copper) ornaments are made.

Contents

Cultures

Early farming village in Mehrgarh, current-day Baluchistan, Pakistan, c. 7000 BC, with houses built with mud bricks. (Musée Guimet, Paris).
Early farming village in Mehrgarh, current-day Baluchistan, Pakistan, c. 7000 BC, with houses built with mud bricks. (Musée Guimet, Paris).
Excavations at the South Area of Çatal Höyük
Excavations at the South Area of Çatal Höyük
7th millennium BC anthropomorphized rocks found in modern-day Israel
7th millennium BC anthropomorphized rocks found in modern-day Israel
Neolithic
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Mesolithic

Pre-Pottery Neolithic A

Pre-Pottery Neolithic B

Pottery Neolithic

Levant
Tell Halaf
Ubaid period
Europe
Linear Pottery
Vinča culture
China
South Asia
Mehrgarh
Americas

Chalcolithic

Uruk period
Yamna culture
Corded Ware
Europe
Mesoamerica

farming, animal husbandry
pottery, metallurgy, wheel
circular ditches, henges, megaliths
Neolithic religion

Bronze Age

Greece.

Inventions, discoveries, introductions

Environmental changes

Holocene epoch
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Pleistocene
Holocene
Preboreal (10 ka - 9 ka),
Boreal (9 ka - 8 ka),
Atlantic (8 ka - 5 ka),
Subboreal (5 ka - 2.5 ka) and
Subatlantic (2.5 ka - present).
Anthropocene

References

  1. ^ Encyclopedia Britannica, "Melanesian cultures"
  2. ^ Roberts, J: "History of the World." Penguin, 1994.