Gums, Germs, and Steel finishing video

Today in class, we finished watching part one of the Guns, Germs, and Steel video. There are three parts in total of the video series, but Mr. Schick told us that we are only going to be watching part one. We rewatched the part of the video about the 14 domesticated animals because that will be a key part of this unit. We continued to learn about Diamond's theory of geographic luck. We learned about the fertile crescent, it's located in the middle east and all of the lands are on the same line of latitude. Civilizations in the fertile crescent would be geographically blessed. None of the domesticated animals came from Papua New Guinea, they came from North Africa, Europe, and Asia; the llama came from South America. Papua New Guineans eventually got pigs, but none of the other domesticated animals meaning that they still have to do manual labor. We also got to take a quick look at the more developed parts of Papua New Guinea, so we could see that not everyone lives like the highlanders in Papua New Guinea, but they are still far behind the rest of the world. After finishing the video, we went onto the world factbook as a class and looked at some of the rates that we learned about previously for Papua New Guinea. After that, the class was over.

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