{"id":518,"date":"2010-07-01T13:55:30","date_gmt":"2010-07-01T17:55:30","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/wnet\/humanspark\/?p=518"},"modified":"2011-04-05T10:34:03","modified_gmt":"2011-04-05T14:34:03","slug":"sticks-and-stones-prehistory-technology-lesson-activities","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/wnet\/humanspark\/uncategorized\/sticks-and-stones-prehistory-technology-lesson-activities\/518\/","title":{"rendered":"Lesson Activities"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong>Introductory Activity<br \/>\n<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong> <\/strong><\/p>\n<p>1. Ask students how they would define \u201ctechnology\u201d in the most simple and general terms possible. (<em>Accept all answers<\/em>, <em>but explain that anthropologists define technology as the use and knowledge of tools, techniques, and systems to solve problems or otherwise serve some purpose<\/em>.) Ask students how they would define a tool in the most simple and general terms possible. (<em>Accept all answers<\/em>, <em>but explain that a simple working definition of a tool is that it is some sort of instrument used to perform or facilitate work.) <\/em>According to this definition, ask students if they think something as complex as a computer could be considered a tool. (<em>Yes<\/em>.) What about the software that runs on that computer? (<em>Yes.) <\/em> But what were the tools that <em>made<\/em> these tools, and what in turn were the tools used to make <em>them<\/em>? Where does it end? Ask students to come up with a list of \u00a010 of the <em>simplest<\/em> tools they can think of. In other words, 10 of the most physically useful objects which they think cannot be broken down into even simpler useful objects. (<em>Probable answers include a knife, a hammer, a screwdriver, etc.<\/em>) Write all answers on a blackboard or whiteboard.<\/p>\n<p>2. Log on to the \u201c<a href=\"http:\/\/www.cosi.org\/files\/Flash\/simpMach\/sm2.html\" target=\"_blank\">Simple Machines<\/a>\u201d website. Click on \u201cThe Essence Of Simple Machines\u201d tab on the bottom left of the screen. The screen will show images of the six classic simple machines. Ask the class to identify and explain the basic function of each one, clicking on the machine\u2019s link to get more information if necessary. (<em>Pulley, inclined plane, lever, screw, wedge, and wheel<\/em>.)<\/p>\n<p>3. For each tool on their list of 10 simple tools, ask students if it is, or contains, one or more of the six simple machines. (<em>E.g. a knife would be an example of a wedge; a hammer would be example of a lever.<\/em>)<\/p>\n<p>4. Explain that these simple machines do indeed constitute some of humanity\u2019s earliest tools\u2014developed and used long before they were named or recognized as the basic building blocks of future technologies. Tell students that in this lesson they will be taking a closer look at some specific instances of \u201cstone age technology,\u201d exploring how some of humanity\u2019s earliest tools were created, what they were used for, and what further evolutions and advancements in humanity itself they may have sparked.<\/p>\n<p><strong> <\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong> <\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>Learning Activities<br \/>\n<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>1. Tell students that in this lesson they will be watching some segments from the PBS series THE HUMAN SPARK, which explores different theories about what it is that makes humans unique among animals. Ask students what ideas they may have about what makes us unique? (<em>Accept all answers<\/em>.) Ask students if they think that making and using tools are traits unique to humans? (<em>Accept all answers<\/em>.) Explain that while tool making and use was once considered uniquely human, more recent research has revealed that other species also make and use tools. Chimpanzees, for example, have been observed stripping sticks with their fingers and teeth so that they may more easily be inserted into ant and termite nests as probes to collect the edible inhabitants. Nevertheless, for no other species has tool making and use\u2014on other words, technology\u2014been such a central part of an evolutionary strategy as it has been for humans.<\/p>\n<p>2. Tell students that they will know be looking at a video segment which examines the context and construction of one of humanities\u2019 earliest tools\u2014the hand ax. As they watch, ask students to be watching for the reason why archaeologist John Shea believes the design of the hand ax changed so little for so long.\u00a0 PLAY Clip 1: \u201cIf It Ain\u2019t Broke\u2026\u201d<\/p>\n<p><strong> <\/strong><\/p>\n<p>3. Review the focus question: why does archaeologist John Shea believe the design of the hand ax changed so little for so long? (<em>The design of the hand ax was not under a\u00a0\u00a0 \u201cpowerful pressure of natural selection\u201d to evolve and improve; in other words, it wasn\u2019t broke, so it wasn\u2019t fixed!<\/em>) Ask what natural selection is? (<em>Charles Darwin\u2019s principle of \u201csurvival of the fittest.<\/em>\u201d) Explain that Shea is using an evolutionary term usually applied to organisms and applying it instead to an organism\u2019s inanimate creation; the more \u201cfit\u201d a tool seems to serve its purpose, the less it is refined or \u201cevolves\u201d, and the more it \u201csurvives\u201d in its existing form.<\/p>\n<p>4. Ask students how stone-age hand axes were made, based on Professor Shea\u2019s demonstration. (<em>A piece of rock is hit with another piece of rock, which chips pieces off, creating a sharp edge.)<\/em> What kind of rock would work best for constructing hand axes in this manner? (<em>Accept all answers, but point out that flint and certain other sedimentary rocks are ideal<\/em>.) What are sedimentary rocks? (<em>Sedimentary rocks are created by the geological compression over time of layer upon layer of sediments, generally left behind where there were once rivers or other bodies of water.) <\/em>Why are they ideal materials for creating tools? <em>(Their sedimentary layers can easily be chipped or \u201cflaked\u201d away to produce a sharp edge<\/em>.)<\/p>\n<p>5. Tell students that besides being a good stone for making into blades, flint possesses another extremely useful quality\u2014what is it? (<em>Flint, when struck with a rock containing iron, can generate sparks which can be kindled into flame.<\/em>) Explain that this technique, known as<em> <\/em>\u201cpercussion firestarting,\u201d is generally though to have developed around 7,000 B.C.\u2014much later than the stone hand axes seen in the previous clip. Recent archaeological discoveries, however, suggest that fire did indeed play a role in the creation of certain stone blades dating back at least 72,000 years ago. As they watch the next clip, have students pay attention to what \u201csilcrete\u201d is and what role fire played in its use as a raw material for stone blades.\u00a0 Play Clip 2: \u201cPyroengineering.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>6. Review the previous question: what is silcrete? (<em>A material long thought to be ideal for making stone blades<\/em>, <em>many high-quality examples of which have been found by archaeologists<\/em>). How was archaeologists\u2019 actual experimental experience with silcrete problematizing this theory? (<em>They themselves couldn\u2019t make silcrete into good blades.) <\/em>What was the archaeologists\u2019 breakthrough in understanding how the high-quality silcrete blades were made? (<em>They discovered silcrete encased in ash, suggesting that it had been heat-treated<\/em>.) What happened when they heat-treated silcrete themselves during a barbeque? (<em>It took on the same red color as the original silcrete blades they\u2019d found, and when struck, flaked off sharp edges beautifully.)<\/em><\/p>\n<p>7. Tell students that hardening by fire is also known as \u201ctempering,\u201d and that it is widely used in almost every type of manufacturing today, but that silcrete was perhaps its original use. Ask student how this type of \u201cpyroengineering\u201d might first have been discovered by early man? (<em>Accept all answers, but point out that it may very well have been discovered accidentally when raw silcrete was heated in a cooking fire not unlike that made by Curtis Marean and his fellow archaeologists at their barbeque<\/em>.) Remind students that silcrete blades have been found that date back over 72,000 years. Ask students how they think tempering would have been possible so many years before humans developed the ability to create fire? If necessary, offer this hint: how does fire occur naturally? (<em>Flames started naturally by lighting strikes could, with care, be maintained more or less indefinitely<\/em>.)<\/p>\n<p>8. Point out how the case of silcrete is a good illustration of how much archaeological knowledge must be extrapolated from relatively mundane artifacts (e.g. an ash-encrusted rock) and confirmed through modern experimentation (e.g. the archaeologists\u2019 barbeque.) When most of the prehistoric archeological record consists of various types of rock, even the subtlest differences can be significant to the trained eye. Ask students how archaeologists can distinguish between pieces of flint which were simply broken naturally from pieces that were deliberately fashioned into axes by early humans? (<em>Accept all answers, and tell students to be thinking about this question as they watch the next clip.)<\/em> PLAY Clip 3: \u201cMaking Stone Tools Is Sooo Millions of Years Ago.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>9. PAUSE at 1:54 right after John Shea says to Alan Alda \u201cOf course they didn\u2019t have guns yet.\u201d Review the previous question: how can archaeologists distinguish between pieces of rock which were naturally broken from pieces that were deliberately fashioned into axes by early humans? (<em>Rocks that are naturally fractured tend to be worn equally over their entire surface, and chipped in all directions, whereas artificially created ax heads show careful chipping only along the cutting edges, and always in one direction. Also, the environmental context in which rocks were found gives strong indication of whether they were made by humans.) <\/em>Ask students what specific uses they think hand-axes had. PLAY Clip 3 through to the end.<\/p>\n<p>10. Review the previous question: for what specific uses were hand-axes used? (<em>They were multi-use tools, but depending on the nature of the edge they could be used for cutting or scraping<\/em>.) Ask students to review the six classic simple machines. (<em>Screw, inclined plane, pulley, wheel, lever, and wedge.) <\/em>What kind of simple machine is a hand axe? (<em>A wedge<\/em>.) How does a wedge work? (<em>It splits objects.)<\/em><\/p>\n<p>11. Ask what would happen if you somehow attached a hand axe to a long stick or shaft?\u00a0 (<em>You would have created a spear.)<\/em> What are the advantages of a spear over a hand axe? (<em>Greater range.) <\/em>Ask if a spear is fundamentally a different type of simple machine than a hand axe. (<em>No\u2014a spearhead is a wedge exactly like a hand-axe; only the nature of the force behind it is different\u2014i.e. the force of a thrust, or the force of momentum if thrown<\/em>.) Ask students how they think early humans went about making spears. (<em>Accept all answers<\/em>.) Tell students to be watching in the next clip for the answer to this question. PLAY Clip 4: \u201cTo Make A Spear.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><strong> <\/strong><\/p>\n<p>12. PAUSE at 35:55, after Shea says \u201cIn a real one we\u2019d have a lot of glue in there.\u201d Review the previous question: how did early humans make multi-part spears? (<em>A stone spearhead would be made in a manner similar to a hand ax, inserted into a groove cut in a wooden stick or shaft, held in place with pitch or some other type of glue, and secured by multiple windings of animal sinew or plant fiber<\/em>.) Explain that the spear, when thrown, was one of the earliest examples of \u201cprojectile technology.\u201d Ask what the very earliest example probably was? (<em>A thrown rock<\/em>.)\u00a0 Ask students what advantage projectile weapons had against the handheld variety? (<em>Greater range.)<\/em> What are the benefits of a weapon with greater range? (<em>Accept all answers<\/em>.) Have students pay particular attention to this question as they watch the remainder of the clip. PLAY Clip 4 through to the end.<\/p>\n<p>13. Review the previous question: what are the benefits of a weapon with greater range? (<em>Larger, more dangerous prey like woolly mammoths could be hunted at a safer distance<\/em>.) Ask students if in the last clip they observed Shea and Alda using another example of stone-age technology to give their spears even greater range? If necessary, go back and play the clip from the previous pause point at 35:55. (<em>They were using wooden \u201cspear-throwers,\u201d one end of which fit over the spear\u2019s end with the other being held in the hand of the thrower<\/em>.) Ask students how they think a spear-thrower works. (<em>Accept all answers.<\/em>) Tell students that the spear thrower used by Shea and Alda\u2014also known as an \u201catlatl\u201d\u2014has been developed by many primitive cultures around the world. Ask students if they think the atlatl is an example of another simple machine? (<em>Yes<\/em>\u2014<em>a lever.) <\/em>Explain that an atlatl is specifically a \u201cthird class lever,\u201d which works by applying force between the fulcrum (the thrower\u2019s shoulder) and the load (the spear or dart). By allowing a smaller movement on the fulcrum end of the lever to be magnified into a larger movement on the load end, an atlatl adds speed\u2014and accordingly, distance\u2014to the spear\u2019s trajectory by effectively lengthening the thrower\u2019s arm. <em> <\/em><\/p>\n<p>14. Ask students whether early humans hunted larger game animals individually or in groups? (<em>In groups.) <\/em>Why?<em> (Because even the more advanced projectile technology of the atlatl-thrown spear wasn\u2019t powerful enough for one person to kill a larger animal single-handedly<\/em>.) Ask students why John Shea suggests in the clip that the nature of cooperative hunting was in itself also a major factor in humans\u2019 evolutionary advancement. (<em>The coordination and cooperation necessary for a group of early humans together required communication and planning, which in turn required language<\/em>.)<\/p>\n<p>15. Ask students which they think came first\u2014primitive hunting implements or the language necessary to coordinate their use? (<em>Accept all answers.) <\/em>Point out that the likely answer to this \u201cchicken and egg\u201d dilemma is that the development of hunting tools and language was intertwined, with an advance in one leading to an advance in the other. Ask how else improvements in hunting might have affected human evolution? (<em>Accept all answers.)<\/em> Explain that, generally speaking, improvements in hunting allowed more and bigger game to be hunted, providing more meat in early humans\u2019 diet; more meat, in turn, is believed to have contributed to a larger brain size; a larger brain size, among other things, helped contribute to even more sophisticated tool technology and language use, and so on. Essentially, our tools are extensions of ourselves\u2014technologies that are both the artifacts of our evolutionary development to date, and catalysts for future development.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Culminating Activity<br \/>\n<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>1. Divide students into groups of 4-5. Allow 20-30 minutes for groups to brainstorm five other basic tools or technologies which they think may have contributed to human advancement. Instruct groups to keep their ideas as simple and elemental as possible (e.g. \u201cthe plow,\u201d rather than \u201cfarming machinery\u201d).<\/p>\n<p>2. Have each group present their ideas to the rest of the class as you write down all ideas on the blackboard or whiteboard. Encourage questions and comments from the class. Can any tool or technology be reduced to a simpler, more basic element? Is the tool an example of a simple machine? Does it include multiple simple machines? What human advancement might it have helped facilitate?<\/p>\n<p>3. After all groups have presented, have each student choose one of the tools or technologies listed on the black or whiteboard as the subject for a short research essay addressing the following questions:<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>When was the tool or      technology developed\/invented?<\/li>\n<li>What need did it address?<\/li>\n<li>Who developed\/invented it?<\/li>\n<li>What advance did it make      possible?<\/li>\n<li>How has the tool or      technology been developed, improved, or expanded beyond its original      incarnation?<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p>Proceed to<a href=\"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/wnet\/humanspark\/?p=521\" target=\"_self\"> Video Segments<\/a>.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Introductory Activity 1. Ask students how they would define \u201ctechnology\u201d in the most simple and general terms possible. (Accept all answers, but explain that anthropologists define technology as the use and knowledge of tools, techniques, and systems to solve problems or otherwise serve some purpose.) Ask students how they would define a tool in the [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":42,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[4376,1],"tags":[476,189,562,9681,9824,457,6985],"class_list":["post-518","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-no-home-page","category-uncategorized","tag-evolution","tag-hunting","tag-neanderthals","tag-simple-machines","tag-technology","tag-tools","tag-weapons"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.1.1 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Sticks and Stones: Prehistory Technology ~ Lesson Activities | The Human Spark | PBS<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/wnet\/humanspark\/uncategorized\/sticks-and-stones-prehistory-technology-lesson-activities\/518\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Sticks and Stones: Prehistory Technology ~ Lesson Activities | The Human Spark | PBS\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Introductory Activity 1. Ask students how they would define \u201ctechnology\u201d in the most simple and general terms possible. (Accept all answers, but explain that anthropologists define technology as the use and knowledge of tools, techniques, and systems to solve problems or otherwise serve some purpose.) 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