This lesson contains 14 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 3 videos.
Lesson duration is: 50 min
Items in this lesson
Discuss, search and answer:
How do we know how Prehistoric people lived?
Start-of-the-lesson group task:
Every lesson starts with this.
Make groups of 2 or 3
one of you logs in at LessonUp
You hand in 1 joint answer.
Slide 1 - Slide
Start-of-the-lesson group task: One answer per group: How do we know how Prehistoric people lived?
Slide 2 - Open question
1. The Age of Hunters and Farmers
1.1 The first humans
Slide 3 - Slide
Slide 4 - Video
what do you learn today?
how the first humans lived
evolution theory versus creation narrative
how do we get our knowledge of the past: SOURCES
Slide 5 - Slide
Slide 6 - Video
Where do humans come from?
For thousands of years, people answered this question by explaining that a god or a number of gods created humans. A well-known example of this is the story of Adam and Eve. These first man and woman were made by God and lived in paradise until they ate from the forbidden tree. A story like this is an example of a creation narrative.
But scientists have another explanation about the origin of humans. They studied the bones of Lucy and learned that the first humans lived in Africa and that they looked completely different from how we look today. Still, these scientists say that they were our ancestors because they walked on two legs. So they must have changed if they had become like us. How is that possible?
Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden by Wenzel Peter, 19th century, Vatican Museum
Slide 7 - Slide
Theory of evolution
This was also the most important question that the biologist Charles Darwin asked himself around 1850. On his travels he discovered that species change over time. They adapt themselves to their environment in order to survive. A polar bear is white because it lives in the snow and a giraffe has a long neck to eat leaves on high trees. This process of adaption can take millions of years.
Darwin’s idea is called the theory of evolution. He also wrote that humans and apes have the same ancestors. It took three million years for these first humans to change into the people that we are today. In the family tree below you can see the different human-like ancestors that used to be alive.
Charles Darwin, 1809 - 1882
This is the human family tree, with the different species of early humans.
The Latin word Homo means ‘man’. When we talk about humans we use this word. For example: Homo habilis was ‘the tool using man’ and Homo erectus ‘the upright man’. We modern humans are Homo sapiens sapiens which means ‘very wise man’.
Slide 8 - Slide
Slide 9 - Video
Slide 10 - Slide
Create the correct story of the video by dragging the texts to the correct place.
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Europe suffered from an Ice Age while Africa became hot and dry.
Neanderthals became extinct.
1 million years ago Heidelbergensis lived
in Europe and Africa
30,000 years ago Homo Sapiens migrated from Africa
to Europe
The climate changed:
Homo Sapiens is the only remaining species of humans.
Heidelbergensis could not use imagination as we can
European Heidelbergensis evolved into Neanderthals and African Heidelbergensis into Homo Sapiens
Slide 11 - Drag question
Slide 12 - Slide
Read the text "Out of Africa"
Describe the Out of Africa theory in your own words.