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10,000 BC

The 10th millennium BC marks the beginning of the Mesolithic and Epipaleolithic period, which is the first part of the Holocene epoch. Agriculture, based on the cultivation of primitive forms of millet and rice, occurred in Southwest Asia. Although agriculture was being developed in the Armenian Highlands and the Fertile Crescent, it would not be widely practiced for another 2,000 years. Pottery was produced in Japan and North Africa.

The world population was likely below 5 million people, most of whom were hunter-gatherer communities scattered over all continents except Antarctica. The Würm glaciation ended, and the beginning interglacial, which endures to this day, allowed the re-settlement of northern regions. The most recent glacial ended circa 10,000 BC, and the world entered a period of global warming which continued until the mini ice age of the Middle Ages.

Events

  • c. 10,000 BC - stone temples at Gobekli Tepe are buried and abandoned by hunter gatherer tribes [1]
  • c. 10,000 BC - First cave drawings are made, with War scenes and Religious scenes, beginnings of what become story telling, and morphed into acting.
  • c. 10,000 BC - Pottery was first produced in Japan.
  • c. 10,000 BC - Bottle Gourd is domesticated and used as a carrying vessel.
  • c. 10,000 BC - end of the most recent glaciation.
  • c. 9,500 BC - There is evidence of harvesting, though not necessarily cultivation, of wild grasses in Asia Minor about this time.
  • c. 9,500 BC - First building phase of the temple complex at Göbekli Tepe.
  • c. 9400s BC - Fall of Atlantis as told by Critias.
  • c. 9,300 BC - Figs were apparently cultivated in the Jordan River valley.
  • c. 9000 BC - Neolithic culture began in Ancient Near East.
  • c. 9000 BC: Near East: - First stone structures are built at Jericho.

Old World

Americas

Environmental changes

Circa 10,000 BC:

Circa 9700 BC: Lake Agassiz forms.

Circa 9600 BC: Younger Dryas cold period ends. Pleistocene ends and Holocene begins. Paleolithic ends and Mesolithic begins. Large amounts of previously glaciated land become habitable again.

Circa 9500 BC: Ancylus Lake, part of the modern-day Baltic Sea, forms.