Respuesta :
Answer:
Mesopotamia and Indus Valley
Explanation:
- The culture of the Indus Valley: it was a civilization of the Bronze Age, which developed from c. 3300 a. C. to 1300 a. C. along the Indus River valley, in Afghanistan, Pakistan and northwestern India. It encompassed about a hundred settlements and two major cities: Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro, both sites in Pakistan. Altogether it comprised the most extensive area of all the ancient civilizations, more than a million square kilometers, and it crossed several periods, being its maximum splendor between the 2600 and the 1900 a. C.
- Mesopotamia: Inland, Mesopotamia, agriculture and livestock were imposed between 6000 and 5000 a. C., assuming the full entrance to the Neolithic During this period, the new production techniques that had developed in the initial Neolithic area expanded in the later development regions, including the interior Mesopotamia. the development of cities. Some of the first were Bouqras, Umm Dabaghiyah and Yarim and, later, Tell es-Sawwan and Choga Mami, who formed the so-called Umm Dabaghiyah culture. Later this one was replaced by the cultures of Hassuna-Samarra, between the 5000 and the 5600 a. C., and Halaf culture between 5600 and 4000 a. C. (Late Halaf).