Beginnings of history: part 1

General

Description

Originally broadcast as a segment of the television program Johns Hopkins science review on July 15, 1954 from the studios of WAAM in Baltimore, Md. Black and white. Produced by WAAM television station in Baltimore, Md. for the Dumont Network. Digitized in 2004.

Abstract

In this unhosted program, a film by the British Information Service traces the remains of graves, temples, houses, tools and other possessions of prehistoric civilizations in the United Kingdom. During the Old Stone Age, men hunted wild animals with crudely made tools and lived in caves. When the ice receded in the New Stone Age, the environment and geography of Great Britain was much changed, and men became farmers. Archaeologists interpret this history based on findings at such sites as the Windmill Hill settlement in the U. K., which has yielded the earliest examples of British pottery. Scenes from Skara Brae in the Orkney Islands show the extensive remains of this prehistoric village preserved by blowing sand dunes. And Belas Knap burial mound near Cheltenham reveals the stone chambers and tombs of that period. This two-part program concludes with the Bronze Age, when men learned to produce metals and create more uniform tools, such as a cast ax head.
Title Language
Dates

Date Published

1954-07-15
Publisher
Language
Identifiers

OCLC Number

54681795

Collection Number

COLL-0008

Item Barcode

mq2409130mmmmm
Resources
Resource Type
Moving Image

Extent

00:29:00hh:mm:ss
Contributor
Copyright and Use
System
Access Rights
Public digital access
Model
Video

Unique ID

9b90462f-1bd3-438f-9a97-6c166f56ad68