Exam 1: Encountering the Past
Exam 1: Encountering the Past65 Questions
Exam 2: Probing the Past89 Questions
Exam 3: African Roots88 Questions
Exam 4: The Human Lineage78 Questions
Exam 5: The First Humans: The Evolution of Homo Sapiens118 Questions
Exam 6: Expanding Intellectual Horizons: Arts and Ideas in the Upper Paleolithic and Late Stone Age89 Questions
Exam 7: Expanding Geographical Horizons: New Worlds130 Questions
Exam 8: After the Ice: The Food-Producing Revolution182 Questions
Exam 9: Roots of Complexity: The Origins of Civilization98 Questions
Exam 10: An Explosion of Complexity: Mesopotamia, Africa, and Europe110 Questions
Exam 11: An Explosion of Complexity: The Indus Valley and China52 Questions
Exam 12: An Explosion of Complexity: Mesoamerica100 Questions
Exam 13: An Explosion of Complexity: South America80 Questions
Exam 14: An Explosion of Complexity: North America78 Questions
Select questions type
Most European scientists in the seventeenth century believed that the world was:
(Multiple Choice)
4.7/5
(39)
Christian Jurgensen Thomsen's three-age system was based on a perceived regular pattern of change through time in human:
(Multiple Choice)
4.7/5
(39)
What does Charles Lyell's phrase, "The slow agency of existing causes" mean? How does it reflect the uniformitarian perspective?
(Short Answer)
4.9/5
(39)
How did Darwin's role in the voyage of the Beagle serve him in his later development of a theory of evolution?
(Short Answer)
4.8/5
(36)
Describe the three-age system developed by Christian Jurgensen Thomsen. What assumptions are implicit in Thomsen's breakdown of human prehistory?
(Essay)
4.7/5
(45)
Showing 61 - 65 of 65
Filters
- Essay(0)
- Multiple Choice(0)
- Short Answer(0)
- True False(0)
- Matching(0)