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Guns, Germs and Steel day 3. Ian Kuijt is an archaeologist.  He discovered the earliest sign of a community. The community was called Draa. It first emerged  about 11,500 years ago. It took Ian and his team 4 years to discover the community. Draa had the world's first granary- place to store grain/wheat. The Draa people collected wheat and barley. Today farming is called plant domestication. Places that developed their own farming are China- rice, Americas- corn, squash, and beef, Africa- sorghum, millet and yams. When farming excels in an area, a great nation followed it. new guinea people have been farming for 10,000 years. People who had the most productive crops became productive farmers.
Guns, Germs, and Steel continued. Jared sees people being inferior because of race as absurd. All great civilizations have three things in common. The three things are advance technology, large population and a well organized workforce. Having advance technology gives you a huge advantage in power and goods against your competitors. A large population is simply for multi-tasking. Multiple parts of the country working on different areas to help their country succeed. Having a well organized workforce is what helps the large population work so well. With this the people can get a month's work done in half the time. Pre-history is 13,000 years ago when we didn't record our history. The people then were all living about the same. People in Papua New Guinea who live in the rain forest are still hunters-gatherers. There are people in the Brazilian rain forest who are still hunter-gatherers as well. Wild sago is food the new Guinean people get out of a sago tree. They chop the tree d
1st blog of the new year. It's 1/7/2020 and it's been three weeks since I had to type a blog. Today in class we saw our scores for the midterms. We also talked about the book "Guns, Germs, and Steel". The author is Jared Diamond. The book was published in March 1977. Jared Diamond is a professor at UCLA in Los Angeles. He's a Biologists which is the study of human physiology. His real passion is to study birds. The book explains why Eurasian and North African civilizations have survived and conquered other areas. One factor of this is Geographic luck. This is when you are born into a well-developed area that is better than other areas. The book is also showing why white supremacy is wrong. Jared's journey started in Papua New Guinea. It's located above Australia on an island that looks like a Dino. Why on the island Jared was presented a question by man named Yali. His questions was "Why you white men have so much cargo, and we New Guineans have so
Today we wrote the essay for our midterm. My essay could've been better in some areas. I could've done a better intro for the essay. I also could've extended the paragraph on stage 5, unfortunately I didn't have enough time to add more. My conclusion should've been better too. The only reason I couldn't add onto stage 5 was because I took so much time thinking about how to write the conclusion. I've always had trouble with writing the conclusion, I feel like there's nothing else that needs to be said so I have a blank mind. Here's how my essay should've gone. In the world every country will go through a series of stages. They can delay what happens, but they can’t avoid it. The series of stages have been mapped out for us on the demographic transition. There are 4 or maybe 5 stages every country will go through. Each one is different in its own way. The first stage is the beginning for the countries. This is before the industrial revolution, bu
Stage 1: Before industrial revolution. Started as hunters and gatherers. High birth rate, death rate, and low NIR/population. Birth rate slightly higher than the death rate, slow population increase. No countries in this stage currently. All countries are in at least stage 2. Stage 2: Started from the industrial revolution. England was first to do it then U.S. birth rate remains high while death rate drops. Population/NIR rises higher than the birth rate. High production means more money, which leads to more medicine/bigger houses for kids. Stage 3: Lower birth rate, death rate remains, population/NIR peaks then drops. Women have less children because they enter the workforce. Population falls greatly. Birth rate still higher than death rate, population slowly increases. people live in cities, bad idea to have large families. Colonial Mexico experienced the stage. Stage 4: Slow time for the country. Birth rate barely higher than death rate, population rises very slowly. Birth rate w

Option C

Option C: Consider our studies of fertility (which include data on CBR and TFR) and mortality (CDR, Infant Mortality Rate, Life Expectancy, and Rate of Natural Increase). Describe the four (or five) stages of the Demographic Transition, beginning with the Industrial Revolution, proceeding to the present day, and projecting into the future. Be sure to discuss individual countries as you describe the different stages. In the world every country will go through a series of stages. They can delay what happens, but they can’t avoid it. The series of stages have been mapped out for us on the demographic transition. There are 4 or maybe 5 stages every country will go through. Each one is different in its own way. The first stage is the beginning for the countries. This is before the industrial revolution, but during the time when people were still hunters and gatherers. They would go out and hunt any food they could find. The country will have a high birth rate, high death rate, and a l