• World History Now
  • INTRODUCTION
  • UNIT 1: Pre-History and the Ancient World
    • Chapter 1 Before Civilization >
      • Section 1 Before Civilization
      • Section 2 Early Human Development
      • Section 3 Later Paleolithic Methods of Adaptation
      • Section 4 From Hunting and Gathering to Controlling Food Supplies: The Neolithic Revolution
    • Chapter 2 The First Civilizations >
      • Section 1 Civilization in the Fertile Crescent
      • Section 2 Civilization in the Nile Valley
      • Section 3 Riverine Civilizations in South and East Asia
      • Section 4 A World Apart: The Americas
    • Chapter 3 Migration and Empire: the Spread of Civilization >
      • Section 1 Empires in Mesopotamia
      • Section 2 Invasion and Empire in Africa
      • Section 3 Empires and Kingdoms in the Aegean
      • Section 4 Kingdoms and City-States in Southwest Asia
      • Section 5 Invasion and Empire in South and East Asia
    • Chapter 4 The Persian and Greek World >
      • Section 1 The Persian Empire
      • Section 2 The City-States of Greece
      • Section 3 War and Empire in the Aegean (CA. 500-338 B.C.)
      • Section 4 The Development of Greek Culture
  • UNIT 2: Consolidation and Expansion: The Classical World
    • Chapter 5 The Hellenistic World >
      • Section 1 The Crisis of Greek Civilization
      • Section 2 The Rise of Macedonia and Alexander the Great
      • Section 3 Hellenistic Civilization
    • Chapter 6 The Growth of Asian Civilizations, 500 B.C.-550 A.D. >
      • Section 1 Indian Society and Religion
      • Section 2 Beginnings of Imperial India
      • Section 3 Classical China
      • Section 4 Imperial China
    • Chapter 7 The Roman World
    • Chapter 8 Early African Civilizations
  • UNIT 3: Civilizations in Transition: The Medieval World
    • Chapter 9 Persia, Byzantium and the Rus
    • Chapter 10 The Rise of Islam
    • Chapter 11 A New Civilization in Western Europe: the Rise of Latin Christendom, 476-1350 >
      • Chapter 11 Section 4
    • Chapter 12 Transformations in Asia, 220-1350 A.D.
  • UNIT 4: Civilizations in Revolution and Confrontation: The Early Modern World
    • Chapter 13 Transformations in Asia and Africa on the Eve of European Overseas Expansion
    • Chapter 14 Seeds of Revolution: European Civilization, 1300-1650
    • Chapter 15 A New Worldview in Europe, 1500-1750
    • Chapter 16 The World in the Age of European Expansion, 1492-1763
  • UNIT 5: Consolidation and Expansion of the Modern World
    • Chapter 17 European Revolutions of Society and State, 1714-1815
    • Chapter 18 Industrial Revolution in the West: 1700-1914
    • Chapter 19 An Era of Expansion and Reform
    • Chapter 20 Nation-States and Empires in Europe: 1814-1914
    • Chapter 21 An Imperial World Order, 1757-1914
  • UNIT 6: The Modern World in Crisis
    • Chapter 22 World War I
    • Chapter 23 Revolution, Depression and the Rise of Totalitarianism
    • Chapter 24 The Growth of Colonial Nationalism, 1880-1939
    • Chapter 25 World War II
  • UNIT 7: The Emergence of a Post-Imperial World Order
    • Chapter 26 Postwar Europe and North America, 1945-1968
    • Chapter 27 The Era of Decolonization >
      • Section1 Decolonization, Nationalism, and Independence in South Asia
      • Section 2 The People's Republic of China
      • Section 3 The Re-emergence of Japan
      • Section 4 Decolonization and the 'Hot' Cold War in Asia
      • Section 5 Post-Cold War Asia
      • Section 6 Nationalism, Decolonization and Independence in Southwest Asia
      • Section 7 Decolonization and Nationalism In Africa
    • Chapter 28 Postwar Latin America
    • Chapter 29 From the Past to the Future: 1968 to the Present >
      • Section 1 From Cold War To “New World Order”
    • Chapter 30
    • Chapter 31
World History Now
Chapter 3 
Migration and Empire: the Spread of Civilization
As the early river valley civilizations grew, they also continued to develop new and improved agricultural tools. Perhaps the most significant such tool was the plow, which made it possible to bring more and more land under cultivation. The silts deposited in river valleys thanks to periodic flooding were already moist and therefore easily worked by human hands. Beyond the reach of such floods, however, most land quickly became dry and therefore much harder to work. Even in areas of regular rainfall, drier harder soil did not easily absorb enough of the rainwater to allow large-scale surplus agriculture to develop. As often as not, most rain simply ran off the land without penetrating it. Such dry conditions also made it difficult to actually plant seeds in the ground, and if seeds were simply scattered on the surface most would be eaten by birds and foraging animals before they could germinate and take root. By using plows to break up such hard dry soils, however, people were gradually able to expand large scale agriculture beyond the river valleys into all areas that received enough rainfall to make crops possible. Expansion of agriculture and growing populations into rain-watered regions also led to increased trade. Consequently, between about 3000 B.C. and 1400 B.C. the expansion of large-scale agriculture outside the river valleys also made it possible for civilization itself to expand into any area that could sustain sufficiently productive rainwater agriculture. 
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