ABSTRACT

This is an introduction to human prehistory written for complete beginners with a global perspective. It is written in a jargon-free style that covers 6 million years of the remote past from human origins to the first pre-industrial civilizations, balancing theoretical discussion with descriptions and analysis of major sites and cultural developments.

World Prehistory provides a unique and balanced narrative of what happened in the prehistoric past and why. The book is well worth acquiring, as it provides essential historical background to a wide variety of subjects, from written history and environmental studies to climate change. Chronological tables, numerous illustrations, guides to further reading, and stand-alone boxes on some archaeological methods, key sites, and some people of the past amplify much of the basic narrative.

This global prehistory is aimed at people with no background in archaeology, undergraduates at all levels, and participants in graduate seminars on a wide range of subjects. Numerous people with a general interest in archaeology and multidisciplinary history have acquired and enjoyed this book.

part I|44 pages

Prehistory

chapter Chapter 1|40 pages

Introducing World Prehistory

part II|82 pages

The World of the First Humans

chapter Chapter 2|37 pages

Human Origins

chapter Chapter 3|40 pages

African Exodus

part III|125 pages

The Birth of the Modern World

chapter Chapter 4|31 pages

Diaspora

chapter Chapter 5|28 pages

The Origins of Food Production

chapter Chapter 6|32 pages

The Earliest Farmers

chapter Chapter 7|29 pages

Chiefs and Chiefdoms

part IV|119 pages

The First States: Preindustrial Civilizations

chapter Chapter 8|25 pages

State-Organized Societies

chapter Chapter 9|26 pages

Mesopotamia and the Eastern Mediterranean World

chapter Chapter 10|38 pages

Egypt and Africa

chapter Chapter 11|25 pages

South, Southeast, and East Asia

part V|88 pages

Preindustrial States in the Americas

chapter Chapter 12|30 pages

Lowland Mesoamerica

chapter Chapter 13|23 pages

Highland Mesoamerica

chapter Chapter 14|30 pages

Andean States

chapter |4 pages

Epilogue