Sure.
They're a poor choice for a vehicles or carts, as they're heavy and prone to cracking. But an excellent choice for a mill that uses a wheel, or a potters wheel where a bit of weight helps to keep it turning smoothly.
Pottery wheels were used in the stone age. Wheels were used on small objects, such as toys. There is evidence of carts from the stone age, but they seem not to have been in widespread use, possibly because there were no good materials for axle bearings until bronze became available.
the function of a wheel was used for transportation, and in the B.C period during the Stone Age it was also used for carrying large animals.
Neither, the wheel was invented in the copper age, by some Sumerian that history forgot. Also, remember that the wheel wasn't originally used in carts and such like, it was used to help make pottery.
The Egyptians used the wheel and axle by transporting big stone blocks so they could build houses and pyramids.
A large stone carved in the shape of a wheel for sharpening axes and knives or for grinding grains.
The wheel was revolutionary. Today, almost everything uses a wheel. No one knows why the wheel was invented, but I know that in Mesopotopia, in the year 3500BC, someone invented it and used it as what we call the "potter's wheel". Others believe that cave-men invented it before that; in the stone age. sumerians invented the wheel and used it for vehicals,sailboats,mechines,and pottery bowls.
The wheel was invented back in the stone age. So of course there had to of been a veichle invented.
STONE!!!!!!!!!!!
New
the wheel was invented in the stone age, of course.....
the wheel
The wheel