What things bound neolithic people ro give a nomadic life and lead a settled life
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The Neolithic "technological" revolution made the majority of people become more sedentary, dependent on farmed crops, farm animals, especially for labor at first. This in place promoted the emergency of sizable urban areas. Agriculture provided a safer way to guarantee abundant food, this lead to population growth, increase in trade and time for complex cultural advances. Why bother being a hunter gatherer when you could become a settler. Of course this step had advantages but also disadvantages, disadvantages go from increase in large scale armed conflict, to despotic rulers that could better control the population due to control of the food supply and land rights, those and other societal pests that even today plague human society arose from this cessation of personal independence to a greater and continual reliance of human systems and institutions.
This evolution also had large impact on the environment not only on an ecological level, but on the fragility of crops, especially in early time to insect pests, weather and water supply. The adoption of an agrarian culture was not immediate or complete, systems could be said to be in a competition, a energy competition, how efficiently they operated, how much one needed to put in and could take out of these processes and the outcome was determined primarily in population growth, population that permitted not only the assurance of a cultural but territorial dominance in the period and long after. A guarantee that continued up to our present day by legal social constructs, linked to land property rights. From inheritance to the rise of city states and finally into today's nation states, where population numbers, beyond a high enough threshold, becomes a moot point for protection of acquired rights.
MARK BRAINLIEST...
This evolution also had large impact on the environment not only on an ecological level, but on the fragility of crops, especially in early time to insect pests, weather and water supply. The adoption of an agrarian culture was not immediate or complete, systems could be said to be in a competition, a energy competition, how efficiently they operated, how much one needed to put in and could take out of these processes and the outcome was determined primarily in population growth, population that permitted not only the assurance of a cultural but territorial dominance in the period and long after. A guarantee that continued up to our present day by legal social constructs, linked to land property rights. From inheritance to the rise of city states and finally into today's nation states, where population numbers, beyond a high enough threshold, becomes a moot point for protection of acquired rights.
MARK BRAINLIEST...
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