9th millennium BC

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Millennia: 10th millennium BC - 9th millennium BC - 8th millennium BC
Europe and surrounding areas in the 9th millennium BC. Blue areas are covered in ice. (1) Upper Palaeolithic cultures. (2) Mesolithic cultures. (3) Swiderian cultures. (4) Pontic Tardenosian cultures. (5) Iberian Capsian cultures. (6) Oranian cultures. (7) Lower Capsian cultures. (8) The Fertile Crescent.
Europe and surrounding areas in the 9th millennium BC. Blue areas are covered in ice.
(1) Upper Palaeolithic cultures.
(2) Mesolithic cultures.
(3) Swiderian cultures.
(4) Pontic Tardenosian cultures.
(5) Iberian Capsian cultures.
(6) Oranian cultures.
(7) Lower Capsian cultures.
(8) The Fertile Crescent.

The 9th millennium BC marks the beginning of the Neolithic period.

Agriculture spreads throughout the Fertile Crescent and use of pottery becomes more widespread. Larger settlements like Jericho arise along salt and flint trade routes. Northern Eurasia is resettled as the glaciers of the last glacial maximum retreat. World population is at a few million people, likely below 5 million.

Contents

[edit] Events

Stone Age
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before Homo (Pliocene)

Paleolithic

Lower Paleolithic
Homo
control of fire, stone tools
Middle Paleolithic
Homo neanderthalensis
Homo sapiens
out of Africa
Upper Paleolithic
behavioral modernity, atlatl, dog

Mesolithic

microliths, bow, canoes

Neolithic

Pre-Pottery Neolithic
farming, animal husbandry, polished stone tools
Pottery Neolithic
pottery
Chalcolithic
metallurgy, horse, wheel
Bronze Age

[edit] Inventions and discoveries

[edit] Environmental changes

Quaternary Period
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Neogene
Pliocene
Zanclean (5.3 - 3.6 Ma)
Piacenzian (3.6 - 2.6 Ma)
Gelasian (2.6 - 1.8 Ma)

Pleistocene

Early Pleistocene (1.8 - 0.78 Ma)
Middle Pleistocene (780 - 130 ka)
Late Pleistocene (130 - 10 ka)
Older Dryas (14 - 13.6 ka)
Allerød (13.6 - 12.9 ka)
Younger Dryas (12.9 - 11.5 ka)

Holocene (10 ka - present)

Boreal
Atlantic
  • c. 9000 BC: Temporary global chilling, as the Gulf Stream pulls southward, and Europe ices over (1990 Rand McNally Atlas)
  • c. 8000 BCWorld — Rising Sea[citation needed]
  • c. 8000 BCAntarctica — long-term melting of the Antarctic ice sheets is commencing[citation needed]
  • c. 8000 BCAsia — rising sea levels caused by postglacial warming[citation needed]
  • c. 8000 BCWorld — Obliteration of more than 40 million animals about this time[citation needed]
  • c. 8000 BCNorth America — The glaciers were receding and by 8,000 B.C. the Wisconsin had withdrawn completely.[citation needed]
  • c. 8000 BCWorld — Inland flooding due to catastrophic glacier melt takes place in several regions[citation needed]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Roberts, J: "History of the World.". Penguin, 1994.
  2. ^ Roberts, J: "History of the World.". Penguin, 1994.