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History of Technology 3: The Basics of Food 17 Views
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Description:
How did early humans survive without Taco Bell? Check out this video to find out. We suggest pairing it with a Crunchwrap Supreme.
Transcript
- 00:03
So we started the transportation unit with walking, which is about as basic as transportation [Baby walking in a garden]
- 00:07
can get…
- 00:08
…we considered a unit on crawling, but…yeah…no. [Baby crawling across the floor]
- 00:11
Anyway, we kinda liked the whole, "back to the basics," thing, so today, we're going
- 00:15
to start the agricultural technology unit with the very basics of food. [Teacher at the front of a young class]
Full Transcript
- 00:19
We'll figure out how humans fed themselves before they had the plow, or domesticated [Girl eating a bowl of food]
- 00:25
animals, or irrigation systems, or late-night trips to Taco Bell. [Cavemen driving Fred Flintstone type vehicle]
- 00:29
And even though we're going pretty far back in time, don't think that hunters and gatherers [Cavemen with primitave weapons]
- 00:35
didn't use technology.
- 00:37
They totally did.
- 00:38
Because chasing down and killing big animals? [Man running away from a bear]
- 00:40
It's not exactly easy.
- 00:41
And yes, if you do it with your bare hands it will win you the Iron Man award... [Hulk chasing after an elephant]
- 00:46
…but most folks needed a little help.
- 00:49
Eating back in human pre-history was no picnic…
- 00:52
…although, they were all outside, so it was kind of a picnic…. [Cavemen on a picnic blanket]
- 00:55
…Uh…point being…it wasn't easy.
- 00:57
It took skill, strategy, and some really sweet tools.
- 01:00
Tools like bows, fishing nets, and nifty spear launchers called atlatls were [Pictures of the tools]
- 01:06
essential.
- 01:07
With just those technologies, Paleolithic people were able to live all over the world. [Man chucking a net into a lake]
- 01:12
And to think, these days we freak out about going places without wifi... [Man sat crying]
- 01:18
Once our early ancestors’ tummies were taken care of, they got around to inventing art, [Man eating raw steak]
- 01:22
music, language, fire, and religion.
- 01:25
Which kinda shows you the true power of a balanced breakfast.
- 01:28
Let’s zero in on the period of human history called the Upper Paleolithic, which happened [Timeline of human history]
- 01:32
between 50,000 and 10,000 years ago.
- 01:35
This is well before the invention of agriculture, but after the invention of stuff like painting,
- 01:40
fire, stone tools, complicated burials, and language that went beyond pointing at things [Cavemen in a cave]
- 01:46
and saying…"ug."
- 01:48
These guys aren't cartoon cavemen with giant jaw bones and leopard-spotted togas… [Typical cavemen with a spotlight on him]
- 01:53
…they're fully modern hunter-gatherers.
- 01:56
In the Upper Paleolithic period, humans lived on pretty much every habitable corner of the [Map showing human inhabitants all over the world]
- 02:02
planet.
- 02:03
They got there by walking and paddling, remember? [Men paddling on a raft]
- 02:05
People lived in smallish groups—probably less than a hundred people, and they didn't [Small village]
- 02:09
stay in the same place too long.
- 02:11
They had complicated cultures and religions, some pretty sweet stone tools, and a decent
- 02:16
standard of living.
- 02:18
Not too shabby there, Homo sapiens.
- 02:20
But here's the real question: what did these dudes eat? [Woman sat thinking in the kitchen]
- 02:23
Whatever they could get their hands on, actually.
- 02:25
There’s no Official Caveman Diet because different people all over the world ate different [Woman trying to eat a rock]
- 02:31
stuff.
- 02:32
Inuit hunters in the far north probably had diets that were 90% meat….mmm, seal blubber… [Inuit eating raw meat]
- 02:38
…while the Kung in southern Africa ate way more nuts and seeds than meat. [Two African men sat near a pile of nuts]
- 02:45
This means that different people all over the world had different tools and different
- 02:48
techniques for getting that food, too. [Planet Earth]
- 02:51
Some relied mostly on foraging for edible plants, which didn't take very much technology. [Man drops down on a rope over a berry bush]
- 02:57
Others were all about chasing down big animals, killing them, and dragging them back to the [Two men carrying a dead animal on a stick]
- 03:02
home campfire, which definitely required some tech.
- 03:04
We can only imagine they were counting down the days until the first Taco Bell arrived… [Kid looks happy as he is given Taco Bell]
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