Cultures
- c. 3000 BC Nubian A-Group Culture comes to an end
- c. 3000 BC—Cycladic culture started in Ancient Greece.
- c. 3000 BC—Minoan culture appeared on Crete.
- c. 3000 BC—Helladic period started in mainland Ancient Greece.
- Old Elamite period (ca. 2700 BC – 1600 BC).
- c. 2300 BC Nubian C-Group culture
- Corded Ware culture (also Battle-axe culture, or Single Grave culture).
- Norte Chico civilization.
- Late Maikop culture.
- Late Vinca culture.
- Butmir culture.
- Late Funnelbeaker culture.
- Baden culture.
- Globular Amphora culture.
- Early Beaker culture.
- Yamna culture, Catacomb culture, likely loci of Indo-European Satemization.
- The Sintashta-Petrovka-Arkaim culture emerges from the Catacomb culture from about 2200 BC, likely locus of Proto-Indo-Iranian.
- c 2500 BC Austronesian peoples from Formosa have colonised Luzon in northern Philippines
Read more about this topic: 3rd Millennium BC
Famous quotes containing the word cultures:
“A two-week-old infant cries an average of one and a half hours every day. This increases to approximately three hours per day when the child is about six weeks old. By the time children are twelve weeks old, their daily crying has decreased dramatically and averages less than one hour. This same basic pattern of crying is present among children from a wide range of cultures throughout the world. It appears to be wired into the nervous system of our species.”
—Lawrence Kutner (20th century)
“Because of our social circumstances, male and female are really two cultures and their life experiences are utterly different.”
—Kate Millet (b. 1934)
“Both cultures encourage innovation and experimentation, but are likely to reject the innovator if his innovation is not accepted by audiences. High culture experiments that are rejected by audiences in the creators lifetime may, however, become classics in another era, whereas popular culture experiments are forgotten if not immediately successful. Even so, in both cultures innovation is rare, although in high culture it is celebrated and in popular culture it is taken for granted.”
—Herbert J. Gans (b. 1927)