Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Western Civilizations Final Question 2

BCR: The agricultural revolution was a time when the nomadic people of the neolithic era decided to settle down in one place to form a community. These communities formed families, jobs, farms, and routines for day-to-day life, instead of the unknown adventures their ancestors previously faced every day. When these groups of people decided to settle down, things like trading and currency began to take a very vague shadow. These communities of people eventually turned to towns, which, if the population grew enough, made their way into becoming a city. The process took time, but the places that there was abundance in resources were bound to have more people in the area than in places with fewer resources. With people growing their own crops, communities grew even faster. And if these people had never settled down in the first place, large metropolises may have never been formed, because people would just remain constantly on the move.





View Agricultural Revolution in a larger map

See map description for reasoning.




News Article:

THIS JUST IN: The last of the agricultural businesses in the world have all failed.

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