13,8000 BC to 12,000 BC timeline of archaeology including: Gobekli Tepe in Turkey, wooden plank buildings in south Chile, sea level rising, Extinction event resulting in less mega-fauna.
13,500 BP to 12,000 BP, Chile: Wooden plank buildings in the south of Chile.
~ First pottery vessels in Japan .
~ Extinction even resulting in less megafauna (Wikipedia)
~ to 12,000 BP: Extinction Event resulting in less mega-fauna13,000 BP: U.S.A: Evidence of Clovis Man hunting mammoth in what is now New Mexico.
~ North America: Time of mega-Fauna. Called the Paleo-Indian Period. Abundant evidence of human culture and existence.
~ The climate of the Earth began warming after millennia of Ice Age conditions.
~ In the Near and Middle East people called Natufians hunted antelope and Persian gazelle and harvested wild nuts and grasses using flint bladed sickles and showing a very significant population increase.
~ Earliest evidence of human settlement in Argentina.
~ U.S.: Arlington Springs man dies on the island of Santa Rosa off the coast of California.
~ Mexico: human remains deposited in caves which are now located off the coast of Yucatan.
~ A catastrophe known as the Younger Dryas Event occurred. Glacial melt water accumulated in, at least, one colossal freshwater lake in northern Canada. The lake burst into the Atlantic Gulf Stream triggering a thousand year regression in Europe to the cooler dryer times of the late Ice Age.
~ The Younger Dryas Event is thought to have lead directly to agriculture marked by the cultivation of cereals.
~ Ahrenburg culture in central and east Europe.
12,860 BP to 12,640 BP: Ireland: A bear patella dating to this period bearing butchering marks was found in Alice and Gwendoline Cave in County Clare. It is the earliest physical evidence of human habitation in Ireland.
12,700 BP to 12,400 BP: Britain: The Star Carr site in Yorkshire was inhabited by Maglemosian people
12,500 BP: Scotland: Mesolithic hunters camped at Cramdon.
~ to 9370 BP: Jericho established with perhaps 2,000 inhabitants and protected by the wall of Jericho.
12,000 BP: A canine jaw, discovered in a cave in Mesopotamia, is the earliest evidence of the domestication of dogs. What earlier evidence do you know of?
~ Sea level rise may have begun as early as this. Sea level was rising.
~ Epigravettian culture in central and east Europe.
~ to the present: the Holocene Epoch, which some divide into five parts; the Sub-Atlantic being the present of those parts.
~ 12,000 BP: A canine jaw, discovered in a cave in Mesopotamia, is the earliest evidence of the domestication of dogs. What earlier evidence do you know of?
~ Sea level rise may have begun as early as this. Sea level was rising.
~ Epigravettian culture in central and east Europe.
~ to the present: the Holocene Epoch, which some divide into five parts; the Sub-Atlantic being the present of those parts.
~ to 17,000 AD: A warming period in Ireland and beyond,
~ to 17,000 AD: Harvesting of grain increasing.
~ to 13,500
11,500 BP to 650 BC: Called the Archaic Period in the Native America history of Arkansas and most of North America.
~ Turkey: First building phase of the "temple complex" at Gobekli Tepe.
12,000 BP: A canine jaw, discovered in a cave in Mesopotamia, is the earliest evidence of the domestication of dogs. What earlier evidence do you know of?
~ Sea level rise may have begun as early as this. Sea level was rising.
~ Epigravettian culture in central and east Europe.
~ to the present: the Holocene Epoch, which some divide into five parts; the Sub-Atlantic being the present of those parts.
11,500 BP to 650 BC: Called the Archaic Period in the Native America history of Arkansas and most of North America.
~ Turkey: First building phase of the "temple complex" at Gobekli Tepe.