This question is
based on the accompanying documents (1–9). The question is designed to test
your ability to work with historical documents. Some of the documents have been
edited for the purposes of the question.
As you analyze the documents, take into account the source of each document and
any point of view that may be presented in the document.
The term revolution refers to change that has a significant impact on history.
Although the term is most often used to describe political revolutions, it can
also describe social, intellectual, and/or economic change, as in the Neolithic,
Scientific, and Green Revolutions.
Using information
from the documents and your knowledge of global history, answer the questions
that follow each document in Part A. Your answers to the questions will help you
write the Part B essay in
which you will be asked to:
• Discuss two of these revolutions: the Neolithic Revolution, the Scientific Revolution, the Green Revolution
• Explain the significant social, intellectual, and/or economic changes resulting from each of the two revolutions
Directions: Analyze the documents and answer the short-answer questions that
follow each document in the space provided.
Before the
Neolithic Revolution
|
1 Based on this document, identify two characteristics of life before the Neolithic Revolution. [2]
. . The Neolithic Revolution also changed the way people lived. In place of scattered hunting communities, the farmers lived in villages. Near groups of villages, small towns grew up, and later cities too. Thus the Neolithic Revolution made civilization itself possible. (The Ancient Near East). Within the villages, towns and cities, it was possible for people to specialize in the sort of work they could do best. Many stopped producing food at all, making instead tools and other goods that farmers needed, and for which they gave them food in exchange. This process of exchange led to trade and traders, and the growth of trade made it possible for people to specialize even more. . Source: D. M. Knox, The Neolithic Revolution, Greenhaven Press |
2 Based on this document, state one impact of the Neolithic Revolution on the way people lived. [1]
This extract summarizes the findings of several archaeologists in the 1950s and
1960s.
. . . The
first archaeological evidence for the domestication of cereals, and some
of the earliest evidence for the domestication of animals, comes from a
broad region stretching from Greece and Crete in the west to the foothills
of the Hindu Kush south of the Caspian in the east. Here are found the
wild plants from which wheat and barley were domesticated, whilst it is
only in this zone that the wild progenitors [ancestors] of sheep, goats,
cattle and pigs were found together, for the latter two had a much broader
distribution than wild sheep and goats. By the fourth millennium the olive, vine and fig, the crops which give traditional Mediterranean agriculture much of its distinctiveness, had been domesticated in the eastern Mediterranean. Cattle and pigs are thought to have been domesticated after sheep and goats. Cattle were used as draught animals, and for meat; not until the late fourth millennium is there evidence of milking in South West Asia. . . .
Source: D. B. Grigg, The Agricultural Systems of the World, Cambridge University Press |
3 Based on this document, state two changes in agriculture that occurred during the Neolithic Revolution. [2]
.
. . Gradually scientists came to challenge more and more what the ancients
[past civilizations] taught. They came to develop new, better methods of
finding out how things worked. Mathematical knowledge increased and helped
them to reason. They began to think up experiments to check on their ideas
in a methodical way. The scientific revolution had begun. The Chinese, the Indians, the Persians, and the Arabs all gave something before it came about. Today this is not hard to understand, because men and women from all over the world add to scientific knowledge and so help one another. . . . Source: Peter Amey, Scientific Revolution, Greenhaven Press |
4 Based on this document, state two changes resulting from the Scientific Revolution. [2]
. .
Assumptions —
Nicholas Copernicus, The Commentariolus, (1510) |
5 State one scientific belief of Copernicus that is being described in this passage. [1]
. . . As in Mathematicks, so in natural philosophy, the investigation of difficult things by the method of analysis [scientific method], ought ever to precede the method of composition. This analysis consists in making experiments and observations, and in drawing general conclusions from them by induction [reason], and admitting of no objections against the conclusions, but such as are taken from experiments, or other certain truths. For hypotheses [theories] are not to be regarded in experimental philosophy. And although the arguing from experiments and observations by induction be no demonstration of general conclusions; yet it is the best way of arguing which the nature of things admits of, and may be looked upon as so much the stronger, by how much the induction is more general. And if no exception occur from phenomena [facts], the conclusion may be pronounced generally. But if at any time afterwards any exception shall occur from experiments, it may then begin to be pronounced with such exceptions as occur. By this way of analysis we may proceed from compounds to ingredients, and from motions to the forces producing them; and in general, from effects to their causes, and from particular causes to more general ones, till the argument end in the most general. This is the method of analysis [scientific method]: and the synthesis [combination of parts] consists in assuming the causes discovered, and established as principles, and by them explaining the phenomena proceeding from them, and proving the explanations. . . . Source: Sir Isaac Newton, Opticks, 1718 |
6 According to this document, why is the scientific method important? [1]
7 Based on this document, state one way the Green Revolution affected India. [1]
The Green
Revolution The form of agriculture that Borlaug preaches may have prevented a billion deaths. . . . The Ford and Rockefeller Foundations and the World Bank, once sponsors of his work, have recently given Borlaug the cold shoulder. Funding institutions have also cut support for the International Maize and Wheat Center —located in Mexico and known by its Spanish acronym, CIMMYT—where Borlaug helped to develop the high-yield, low pesticide dwarf wheat upon which a substantial portion of the world’s population now depends for sustenance [food]. And although Borlaug’s achievements are arguably the greatest that Ford or Rockefeller has ever funded, both foundations have retreated from the last effort of Borlaug’s long life: the attempt to bring high-yield agriculture to Africa. . . . To Borlaug, the argument for high-yield cereal crops, inorganic fertilizers, and irrigation became irrefutable when the global population began to take off after the Second World War. But many governments of developing nations were suspicious, partly for reasons of tradition (wheat was then a foreign substance in India) and partly because contact between Western technical experts and peasant farmers might shake up feudal cultures to the discomfort of the elite classes. Meanwhile, some commentators were suggesting that it would be wrong to increase the food supply in the developing world: better to let nature do the dirty work of restraining the human population. . . .
Source: Greg Easterbrook “Forgotten Benefactor of Humanity,” Atlantic Monthly, January 1997 |
8a Based on this document, state one development since World War II that led to the Green Revolution. [1]
8b Based on this document, identify one effect of the Green Revolution on food production. [1]
. . . It is not clear which are greater—the successes of modern high-intensity agriculture, or its shortcomings. The successes are immense. Because of the green revolution, agriculture has met the food needs of most of the world’s population even as the population doubled during the past four decades. But there has been a price to pay, and it includes contamination of groundwaters, release of greenhouse gases, loss of crop genetic diversity and eutrophication [pollution] of rivers, streams, lakes and coastal marine ecosystems (contamination by organic and inorganic nutrients that cause oxygen depletion, spread of toxic species and changes in the structure of aquatic food webs). It is unclear whether high-intensity agriculture can be sustained, because of the loss of soil fertility, the erosion of soil, the increased incidence of crop and livestock diseases, and the high energy and chemical inputs associated with it. The search is on for practices that can provide sustainable yields, preferably comparable to those of high-intensity agriculture but with fewer environmental costs. . . .
Source: David Tilman, “The Greening of the Green Revolution,” Nature, November 1998 |
9 According to David Tilman, what are two effects of the Green Revolution? [2]
Directions: Write a well-organized essay that includes an
introduction, several paragraphs, and a conclusion. Use evidence from at least
four documents in the body of the essay. Support your response with relevant
facts, examples, and details. Include additional outside information.
The term revolution refers to change that has a significant impact on history.
Although the term is most often used to describe political revolutions, it can
also describe social, intellectual, and/or economic change,
as in the Neolithic, Scientific, and Green Revolutions.
Using information from the documents and your knowledge of global history, write an essay in which you:
• Discuss two of these revolutions: the Neolithic Revolution, the Scientific Revolution, the Green Revolution
• Explain the significant social, intellectual, and/or economic changes resulting from each of the two revolutions
In your essay, be sure to
• Address all aspects of the Task by accurately analyzing and interpreting at least four documents
• Incorporate information from the documents
• Incorporate relevant outside information
• Support the theme with relevant facts, examples, and details
• Use a logical and clear plan of organization
• Include an introduction and a conclusion that are beyond a simple restatement of the Historical Context