This chapter presents the evolution of complex societies in the Americas and the Pacific Islands up through the sixteenth century. Isolation and varied resources led to a wide range of social structures from simple hunting and gathering to settled agricultural villages to the highly complex urban societies like those of the Aztecs and the Incas. Common aspects of these societies include:
- Isolation from one another and from the cultures of the Eastern Hemisphere.
- Absence of metallurgy, although the peoples of Mesoamerica and South America mined gold and silver.
- Few domesticated animals—the llama and alpaca of the Andes Mountains being the notable exceptions—and, as a result, no wheeled transport.
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