Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Was Caesar a Reformer or a Tyrant?



In my opinion, Julius Caesar was, in fact, a reformer. As he was a great leader, he ended the ruling of the dishonest, and corrupt nobles. Caesar upheld justice, which means he was fair. He restored the cities and aided the poor, and homeless. On top of that he also granted more citizenship and brought peace to Rome. Many people might say that he enjoyed the attention, the fame, and the power, but in my opinion, Julius Caesar was a motivation to people, and an admirable one. Everyone should always have a reason to do something. Even if Caesar's motive was definitely not selfless, his actions were for the good for many, and he was respected and appreciated him by most of the people of ancient Rome. By the end, when he was murdered by the senators of Rome themselves, a civil war started in Rome, which proves that he was the great leader, and reformer, of Rome.

Augustus and Julius Caesar


Gaius Octavius (Augustus), born September 23, 63 B.C., was the son of Octavius, a praetor from Velitrae, and Atia, the daughter of Julius Caesar's sister Julia. When Caesar went to Spain to fight the Pompeians in 45 B.C., Gaius Octavius went with him. Caesar arranging the schedule in advance, named Gaius Octavius Master of the Horse for 43 or 42 B.C. Caesar died in 44 B.C. and in his will adopted Gaius Octavius. Octavius took the name C. Julius Caesar Octavianus at this point.
I think Julius Caesar was a much more critical and major leader than his grand nephew Augustus. Julius Caesar did so much more for Rome; he was a disciplined and very strong leader, he was a great military commander, and he was a tactical genius. Julius Caesar also tried to prevent poverty in his homeland and was loyal to his followers and friends, and would punish criminals who broke the laws. He was the individual who started the Roman Empire. In the end he might have been crazy, had a disease, or he could have just been hungry for power and control, but in this debate, what he accomplished is what counts. Once he was murdered, in other words stabbed by all his friends and followers who were in the room, Rome went into another civil war. The other side of the debate, Augustus did bring 200 years of peace to Rome and expanded its Empire, but without the commence of Julius Caesar, Augustus would have been just another senator; bringing me to the point that without Julius Caesar, Rome would have never become the almighty Empire we know of.

Thursday, November 17, 2011

The Geography of Rome



Geography of Rome is characterized by the Seven Hills and The Tiber River. Rome city situated on the eastern banks of river Tiber has a geographical position of 41° 54' N and 12° 29' E. Rome lies to the west of the Apennine Mountains that forms the backbone of peninsular Italy. Being close to the Tyrrhenian Sea, Rome experiences a Mediterranean climate. 
Rome is popularly called 'the city of seven hills'. These seven hills namely, Viminal, Quirinal, Palatine, Esquiline, Capitoline, Caelian, and Aventine were separated by marshy land and the River Tiber. Of these seven hills, the Caelian, Esquiline, Quirinal and Viminal hills were portions of a volcanic ridge. The Aventine, Capitoline, and Palatine hills formed the western group of hills. In ancient Rome each of the seven hills had separate walled cities. 

Works cited:

Founding of Rome

                 Remus and Romulus, twin brothers that were abandoned near the Tiver River, found by a wolf, and reaised by a shepherd, were the two who founded Ancient Rome.at around 753 B.C. they decided to build a city. The twins quarreled over the wall that Romulus built, and eventually lashed out at Remus and killed him.
                Even farther back than Remus and Romulus though, the famous epic by Virgil, the Roman poet, 
have really flashed out the creation of the empire. Aeneid was the story of the great Trojan hero Aeneas. According to the lefend, him and his band of travelers, crossed the mediterranean Sea after the Greeks captured Troy. As the Trojan armies managed to reach the Tiber River, Aeneas united both Trojans and the Latins, and become what is known as the "father" of Rome.
                Historians of today are not quite sure how Rome really began. Some say that Latins lived there at about 1000 B.C. The built hurts on Rome's hills, tended herds, and grew crops.
  

Sunday, October 30, 2011

Alexander the Great

Alexander the Great. Great. According to the Merriam-Webster dictionary the word great means: Remarkable or outstanding in magnitude, degree, or extent. Was Alexander III of Macedon remarkable in degree or extent? In my opinion he was. Alexander is known as Alexander the Great, Alexander III of Macedon, and the leader who conquered Europe and half of Asia, he is known as a ruler who wasn't ruthless and included Greek culture in his rule, and he tried to tie the Greek culture and the culture's of the cities he conquered together. Alexander is believed not to have lost a single battle he fought, and that just proves the man's superiority physically and mentally. 


Historians say "Alexander was very intelligent, he was even tutored by the great philosopher Aristotle. While conquering the world, Alexander came across the great Gordian knot, which was untied for centuries, he just cut it." This quote will show a person Alexander's mental preparation and readiness for it all, and how his intelligence was the key to success on the battlefield.


After all this, I would like to conclude that Alexander the Great, was in fact great. He was truly unbeaten in battle, but he also helped the cultures and people he conquered. Instead of killing the opposing soldiers and devouring their food and wrecking the city down, he hired the soldiers for his own army, he also invested in cities he took over and advanced and improved their living standards. After all this being done, Alexander will keep his title as the Great, and forever it will last with him.

















Thursday, October 20, 2011

Article Summary - The Spartan Way


Roy Elal
Due: October 11, 2011
Ms. Moore
Humanities 8B
Article Summary #2

For over 200 years, Sparta was considered as the most powerful city-state in Ancient Greece, along with Athens. Its power came from the strong, tough, and professional army. Brutal training that the kids faced from the age of 7 made every man a warrior and the army one of the most-feared fighting forces ever.
 Athens was the birthplace of democracy and freedom. Great artists and thinkers built the foundations of Western culture. Sparta, on the other hand, was a secretive place run by an oligarchy (an oligarchy was a type of government in which the ruling power is in the hands of a couple of people). This city-state has been admired over the centuries for how they valued great discipline over everything else. Sparta also ruled ancient Greece between approximately 600 B.C. and 371 B.C. leaving an immense amount of history behind themselves.
The army consisted of all men above the age of 30, which is also the age when they become full Spartan citizens and are gifted the ability to vote. Sean Price claims, "About 10 percent of Spartan men were full citizens known as equals. Their job was to serve as soldiers in Sparta's army." (Price, 176) This is a very substantial fact, because it tell us that 90 percent of the population was not above the age of 30, that Spartan males die at a young age, and that most males are still in training as boys and young men. Also the women, they were not considered official citizens of Sparta. Boys that are above the age of 7 are forced to join the forces for training, so that when they grow up, they will also be a part of the sturdy Spartan army. When they are born, city elders come over for examination. If the baby was not healthy looking, or did not have a strong organism, they left it on a mountainside to die.
        Women in Sparta had much more freedom versus any other city-state in the whole entire Ancient Greece. They were allowed to move around, and didn't have to stay home all the time. They could own land, which was unacceptable in Athens. They could also do business. Such power was shocking to men from other city-states.
        When Sparta started to fall apart, and getting conquered by the Dorians, all the rituals also became forgotten, but they left a long history behind them, the history of the extroardinary Ancient Greece.

Price, Sean. "The Ancient Olympics." The Ancient World. 2010. Print.

Article Summary *MLA Format*


Roy Elal

Due: October 9th, 2011

Humanities 8

Ms. Moore
Article Summary 

           The number of legends describing the beginning of the first Olympic competition is unknown. According to the legend, the king Enamaus, had a beautiful daughter who's name was Hippodamia. He promised her in marriage, If she would go hiding and the first person to find her and escape in a chariot with her father chasing them would be her lawful husband. Thirteen men have tried and they all failed, and murdered by the king. Then Pelops, the fourteenth came along and survived, so he was the one who married the beautiful Hippodamia. Then he declared himself king, threw a party to celebrate his victory and to give thanks to the god of the gods... Zeus, thus introducing the first Olympic festival.

           The reward given to the winner of the Olympic competition was a wreath of olive branches and the blessing of a god. The competition was a 180 meter long run. The first one to be held was at 776 B.C.E. and eventually ended in 393 A.D., when the Greek empire collapsed. During that time period, 293 Olympic events were held.
Athletic Competitions at the Olympic festivals were limited to male Greek citizens, as viewers and participants. Foreigners, slaves, and women were banned from competition. Each participant had to sign the Olympic 'agreement', swearing he has trained for 10 months and hadn't done anything to offend he gods.
           Records show that boxing, wrestling, and pancratium competitions drew enormous crowds. It probably came from the strong hostilities between cities and tribes. Chariot races also were events that would thrill Olympic spectators. Theodore Knight, historian, claimed, "...the quadrigae - a race for light, two-wheeled chariots pulled by four horses. The distance of the race course was twelve laps around two columns at opposite ends of the hippodrome - about 10,000 meters, or six miles." (Knight, 170.) This is relevant because those Chariot races have been extremely important and sports that would hype up Ancient Greece, and they are basically the reason for the huge crowds at the Games. 

          Once the Ancient Greeks abnegated, that affected the Olympics, that was once the Roman Empire defeated Ancient Greece at around 100 B.C., and the Roman culture and beliefs replaced the Greek ways, and the Olympics went into a decline that lasted for several centuries. For the Romans, war and trade were more important than philosophy religion, or athletics then.
Frenchman Baron Pierre de Coubertin (1863 - 1937) was the man who revived the Olympic Games. Because of his enthusiastic efforts, the first modern Games were finally held in Athens, Greece in 1896.


Bibliography:
Knight, Theodore. "The Ancient Olympics." The Ancient World. 2010. Print.

Ancient Greek Values

Some of the most important values in the Ancient Greek civilizations were ingenuity, hospitality, loyalty, and respect. I believe they're also considered important in our time, because we meet them in our daily life basis (I hope.) Most people would say; "WOW! It's amazing how from around 3000 B.C.E., such qualities evolved among us and still exist today!" Well it's not. These are important values so of course we have them at our time. What is amazing is how they had it in their time, not how it lasted.
Ingenuity means 
skill or cleverness in devising or combining; Inventiveness, this is important because it helps us think of new ideas and make us "genius". In the story of Odysseus, ingenuity is the most common quality found along his journey, and his many adventures. He thinks of all these how to keep himself away from death, and how to help his sailors and crew get home safely. For example, when he met the Cyclops, he called himself 'Nobody' and when the Cyclops screamed "Nobody's escaping!" to his guards after he got stabbed in his eye, the guards didn't know he actually meant someone is escaping. So that part was filled with many exciting and creative ideas and secret plans of escaping, which represent ingenuity.

Another very critical Ancient Greek value shown in the excerpts is hospitality. Hospitality means kindness in welcoming strangers or guests (My definition of the word.) Circe greets them with a very nice manner, but then she changes them into pigs, and erases their memory from home, so that they don't know where their desire is to go, and where exactly their home is (in general, the spell made them forget about everything they were attempting to accomplish.) Although, it is very common in the Ancient Greek times to be very kind/neighborly, even if the people are your enemies, you still had to greet them nicely. All of this represents hospitality.
Loyalty and respect were also extremely important in those times, and the Greeks would always value their family and friends. 

In modern society, one can find ancient Greek values in many places in the world. The positive side of peoples always present the values.  Besides athleticism of course, not everyone is athletic, but the rest all people have. For example, hospitality, it relates much to being caring and friendly these days. You don't have to help every single homeless or poor person that walks by, because back then, there weren't really that many people that actually needed help.
Another Greek value that is very common today, is ingenuity. Many people think of ways to avoid a problem or to solve it, by being 'genius'... basically lies or just helping.

Minoans Vs. Mycanaeans

The Minoan civilization and Mycenaean civilization had many things that were alike. Mycenae was founded 300 years after the Minoan civilization was, and because of the fact 300 years is not a lot, they had many similarities, although the Mycenae was more advanced. For example, the water management. Both civilizations had drain pipes, and bathrooms, with bath tubs and flush able toilets! Although there were differences, the Minoans did not have any house security; door locks or bolts, since there were no theives or  wars. That means that Crete (home of the Minoans) was a very peaceful and calm place. Meanwhile, the Mycenaenas had big fortresses, bridges and walls, to protect themselves from war. 

In my opinion in even later Ancient Greece (Ancient Greece was there for VERY long,) the aspects that would have survived the break-through, would definitely be the cultural practices and the religious ways, since it was of course the people that practiced and owned it, and not that they were forced to or something, like in other cultures/religions. And the cultural styles would have also survived, because they were passed on by oral presentations.

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Taj Mahal


The Taj Mahal was built by a Mongul emperor named Sahah Jahan, for his wife Mumtaz Mahal. Sahah Jahan was born in 1592, while his favorite wife Mumtaz Mahal was born in 1593. They married in 1612 and had seven children. In 1628 Shah Jahan became the Mongul Emperor. Only three years later his beloved wife died shortly after childbirth. In 1632 Sahah Jahan began the project of building a mausoleum, or tomb for his wife, the Taj Mahal. The Taj Mahal is located on the banks of the Yamuna River. It took twenty-two years to complete with an estimated 20,000 workers. The building is surrounded by four 138 ft. minarets and sits on a 315 ft. square marble platform. Each side has a 110 ft. arch and center dome is around 200 ft. high. The building is built in an Islamic style of architecture. Centered in the building is a tomb for Mumtaz Mahal. Next to her tomb, is the tomb for Sahah Jahan. The tombs in the building are empty. The bodies of the two are buried in a crypt below the building. The entire plan of the Taj Mahal is symmetrical, with one exception. Symmetrical means that one side of the building could mirror the other side if cut down the middle. The only exception is the tomb of Sahah Jahan which was added later to the building. There is a story which suggest that Sahah Jahan was planning on building a replica of the Taj Mahal for himself on the other side the river, though no evidence or plans of this has ever been found. Sahah Jahan was overthrown by his own son and imprisoned in the Red Fort within sight of the Taj Mahal. He was forced to spend the last eight years of his life in prison till his death in 1666.

Choose one practice from the Buddhist Eightfold Path and describe how you could incorporate it in your life OR provide an example from your life of a


#6 RIGHT EFFORT:
Without putting effort into something, or anything really, nothing can be achieved. Right now I may be putting my minimum, or my maximum amount of effort. I tend to try and put my maximum efforts in school, basketball, and my social life. Not all at the same time of course, that's not putting the right amount of effort, but more effort than my body, and brain can manage. Whenever I want to improve my shot in basketball, or get a good grade in a Humanities project, I try hard. Sometimes it is hard putting your maximum efforts, but sometimes it is also necessary. After hearing the two powerpoint presentations from Ms. Moore about Hinduism and Buddhism, i was extremely motivated, and decided I will try to do my best, and give all my EFFORTS in humanities class, and all the other classes, trying to get a 6 or a 7 on my report card. As i do not have the reputation of the student with the best grades in the Middle School, I would like that to change by putting more efforts. If you do not put in all your efforts, you will feel disappointed usually, or you won't be proud of your own work. Therefore if you want to be proud of yourself and of your own work, you must put in all your efforts.










Reflection on Maps






Physical features, climate, and elevation, they are all relates to each other somehow, and all affect each other. One example of how they affect each other could be a desert - the desert, being the physical feature, is only created by the climate of that area, which is a very arid, dry climate. If the desert had a different climate, it wouldn't be a desert!
I personally, learned a lot from this mapping project, mainly about India. I also learned that in any country, the physical features depend on the type of climate, and the elevation somewhat depends on the physical features. People usually settle in places where there are many natural resources, created by the physical features, the climate and the elevation of the location.














Saturday, May 28, 2011

Lost City of Mohenjo Daro

Located, in the nowadays Pakistan, lays the lost city of Mohenjo Daro. Mohenjo Daro stood from about 2500 to 1900 B.C., But then at 1900 B.C. it was abandoned completely and was left as a 'Ghost City'. Scientists claim it was abandoned because the people were in jeopardy of starvation because of Earthquakes that occurred, leaving them without an ability to grow their foods.

The city was found in the year 1911, and many excavations were done in the 1920's through the 1940's. Scientists have found that this was an extremely advanced city. It was a fairly large city, and very advanced. It was built on a hill to prevent floods from the nearby Indus river, and it was one of the only cities of its time to have a sewerage system. It was obvious by the artifacts found that it was a fairly wealthy city, thriving in wealth and trade. Many scientists, archaeologists, and historians have studied every inch of this city, and we still have no idea what happened to make the majority of the cities population leave. It reaches some kind of obvious archaeological fruition about 1900 B.C.," Said Jonathan Mark Kenoyer. "What drives that, nobody knows."

Unlike most religions and beliefs their one was based on something else. The closest found to a temple in the town of Mohenjo Daro was a building that somewhat represented a temple. It is believed that this ancient civilization believed in cleanness every house had a well and a bathroom.

Shiva - The Destroyer

I know, that Shiva, the Destroyer, was definitely a popular choice, I think it would be really interesting to to my blog post about her, and what she did. In the Hinduism religion, it is believed that for something to be born, or re-born, something has to die. Shiva is the god, who takes and recycles the soul. Shiva -- The Destroyer, is worshiped by the Hindus because what the Hindus believe is that when you die, you soul is reincarnated... or else enlightened. When one dies, Hindus believe he is reborn either to higher, or a lower social class ranking. People can be reborn, into as high a rank as royalty, or as low as a poor man/slave/animal. Shiva is the God who takes away life... but she is also the God that reincarnates the soul.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Egyptian Art

For this piece of artwork I decided to depict Israeli workers making the great pyramids for a pharoah. The pharoah is in the after life, watching his workers work away. You can tell because the head of the pharoah is in the sky and his skin is a shiny silver color. The workers basically created the Egyptian pyramid legacy and brought them to life. They worked long and hard to finish them for their mighty pharoahs and they were very determined and strong people. I put 100% of my effort into this piece of art because I used may different colors, angles and thoroughly enjoyed making this picture and showing how hard the Israeli people worked. Their hard work to keep the Pyramids alive and for us to witness is possible and without them being strong we would never witness such a site. This piece of art could be found in tombs or in temples because it depicts the Pyramids being made for a certian pharoah. It can also be showed as a picture during the passover when the Israeli people escaped the Egyptian torture.

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

How do natural features such as rivers, lakes and mountains unite people or keep them isolated from each other?




The Nile river is important to the Ancient Egyptians because it kept them alive and developed their knowledge. They depended on it for food, water, transportation and much more. They even thought of it as a kind of god. It flooded once every year, creating fertile soil for growing crops.
The Nile river is important to the ancient Egyptians because it kept them alive and it gave the Egyptian water to drink. It is also grew the material made to make papyrus. Another way that the Nile River is useful is that it floods usually, this helps them because then it can fertilize the Egyptians crops. The Nile River provided rich farmland. It provided water for crops, a way of transportation, water to drink, water to bathe in, and many other useful things. It also gave them protection form the other side of the Nile.


The Nile was one of the main factors in the ancient Egyptians' lives, although it was not very safe for the people living next to the Nile. Once per year, the Nile would flood. When the Nile wouldn't flood enough the farmlands would become useless the crops would not grow and people wouldn't have food; and if the Nile would flood too much the water would scoop away a lot; for example some of the crops would get washed away and the people that lived near it would drown. Once these problems occurred, the people would meet up and try to think of decisions. One of the major decisions they made, was to make the calender, with the same amount of days as there are now, and in that calender were 3 seasons, to see when it would flood, and when their crops would grow. That is when that led to the worlds' first Nation-State.

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Mummies

Words Unknown to Me:
Cryonics: Is the freezing of the body just after they die. This is done to prevent the decomposing of the body.
Cadavers: Is a dead body used as a research for science.

What is a mummy?
A mummy is a corpse whose skin and organs have been preserved by either intentional or accidental exposure to chemicals, extreme coldness, or ancient Egyptian embalming.

1)In what part of the world have mummies been found in? Mummies have been found in Europe, Asia, and in lots of places in Africa.

2) In what types of places have mummies been found? Mummies are usually found in really dry or hot climates, ice regions, or what used to be bogs. All of these places are helpful because it will preserve the body so it doesn't decompose.

3) How did ancient Egyptian preserve their dead? The ancient Egyptians removed all of the bodies inner organs. They used many salts and oils to dry out the skin and other parts of the body. The carcass was then stuffed and wrapped and preserved in linen.

4. Why do you think ancient Egyptians took such care to embalm their dead if the desert could do the job for them?
The Egyptians believed in afterlife. People would draw what they wanted on their tombs to present what they were aiming in their afterlife. As you might know, the Egyptians tombs were robbed, not only because the ancient Egyptians placed food on their tombs but also different symbolic objects that they wanted in there after life.

5) what features of a natural environment can caused bodies to be mummified? If a climate is extremely dry or very cold, this can cause the body to freeze or dry out so that they are preserved and have a much less likely chance of decomposing.

6. According to current scientific beliefs, what are some reasons people were intentionally mummified?
Most of the mummies have been used as a sacrifice to god. Many of the mummies that have been found that were sacrificed to the gods by the symbols they had and in which coffins they were found in. But other times the ancient people wanted the bodies because they believed in afterlife, and sometimes the archaeologists think that the bodies were killed in a war, and were somehow important to the people.



1. What is the relationship between mummification and the natural environment? Provide specific examples from what you read during the previous lesson.
The natural environment enables mummification. For example, it is impossible for a corpse to be mummified in a tropical rain forest. However, with hot climates like what the Ancient Egyptians had, mummifying would be easier and a common thing to do. You could also mummify someone in a very cold climate, such as the Andes mountains in Chile. These natural environments could preserve bodies naturally.

What are the reasons mummies are made? Mummies are made for a lot of reasons. They are thought to be a way to give people an eternal life. If you lost a loved a loved one, it would be a lot more comforting to know that they are not going anywhere and that by mummifying them you are preserving their sole. Also, people were really fascinated with the idea of an afterlife. They wanted to preserve the bodies so that they had a chance at another good life in the afterlife. Although, not all mummification were not an act of love. In places like England there have been sightings of mummies that had been exicuted and their bodys had been thrown in the bog. Some still had ropes tied around their necks. There have also been frozen bodies found on the ops of mountains that would have probably been sacrificed.


Tuesday, March 8, 2011

First Empire project

This is a poster Blaise, Marko, and I have made for our first empire project. We studied the Phoenicians and made a play and the poster (above).

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

End of Unit Reflection

a) The domestication of Plants and Animals
What was one of the biggest steps in the growth of civilization? Definitely the domestication of plants and animals. It gave us humans a way to educate ourselves how to master the environment whom was surrounding our ancestors. Once they determined how to achieve this, they acquired an established food supply, usually possessing extra. Because people didn't have to work as hard to find food, they had time for specialization and division of labor.
b) The transition from hunter-gatherer communities to the first civilizations
Hunter-gatherers didn't have very secure ways of living. They followed the food, instead of making the food follow them. The transition to civilizations was easier and more comfortable. This way they had time to pursue other interests, they always had stable food supplies, and life became more predictable.
c)
Many different civilizations had their own perspective about whom or what they worshiped. Some cultures were polytheism which meant they believed in more than God. This then led to the subject of social classes, this started off with the priests. Many times they sacrificed people and animals to please the Gods.
2. Imagine someone saying to you, "Learning about the Sumerians isn't very
important since they're long gone!" What would you tell them in order to change their mind? Learning about the first ever civilization is important so that we can learn about how we began to settle and survive the world around us. History is like a big puzzle, and only once we find all of the pieces can we truly see the whole picture. Sumerians seemed to be the first real smart people who actually thought for themselves.



Monday, January 17, 2011

Why was Catal Huyuk an important archeological find?

Catal Huyuk was one of the biggest settlements in the world at that time. And by studying it archeologists could find out a lot about the life of earlier humans in one of the first big settlements in the world what there living standards were like and how an average person lived. Through this one city historians and archeologists already found out that the people of Catal Huyuk mostly farmed, they also know the people traded there surplus and made hunting weapons and tools out of obsidian. Catal Huyuk was different than we would think of it there were no roads but everybody walked on each others roof you entered the house through the hole on the roof, to historians and archeologists revealed a lot about the peoples culture and thinking. Catal Huyuk is also very important because through out this we can see how most of the people in this region lived and worked and what the design was of most nearby settlements.

From earliest times, people have changed their environments. How have people today changed their environment. Discuss both the good and the bad.

From the beginning of time, people have always been eager to upgrade and change their way of life. This could be anything from the material of the basket they store food in to the color on their kitchen walls. While we are eager to change, the impacts of our upgrades have in many ways changed our planet and the environment. Although the upgrades have made life much simpler, it has taken a huge toll on the planet.

Although some of the changes we make have killed off some of our environment, not all of it is bad. From an early time people have discovered that when you grow crops, some of the seeds will naturally fall off and re-plant itself. People then knew to leave some of their crops during the harvest so that when the seeds fall, they can depend on those instead of killing more crops. Another great change is that people have discovered natural fertilizers to keep soil healthy for years and years. They can use the same fields instead of re-plowing off new land every year and killing all of the natural plants. early civilizations also molded their houses out of dry clay of mud instead of cutting down trees as timber for houses or killing animals to use the skin as tents.

Although not everything we do kills the planet, the way we are living today is destroying out environment. People use to live in small houses made of dry mud or clay. Today we made larger houses using valuble timber. Another change we have made for the worst is our food industry. We no longer take only what we need, but we buy in massive and un-natural amounts. In order to keep up with our many demands, the food industry is genetically enhancing our food to that it grows, lays, milks, ect. twice as fast and twice as much. This has also caused and unnatural increase in cow population. We bread so many cows for hamburgers that they are now the worlds second most populated animal. One last change that humans have made for the worst is our need for spaces. As people decided that everyone should have a house with a yard and a fence to block everyone out, cities expanded. As the cities expanded we developed ways to get around more conveniently. Cars, plains, and other forms of transportation have taken a huge tool on the environment. The wast we are making is getting so bad that we are developing holes in our ozone. Although the changes make life more efficient for us it is taking its toll on the environment.

We have come up with many changes that have taken their toll on the environment. Although not all the changes we make are bad, there are still enough un- earth friendly changes that soon the entire face of the earth could change. As we move on through history, we will continue to make changes, hopefully in the future they will be more environmentally friendly.