the development of a "common language" allowed for more accurate comunication and also helped push along increased intelligence
the development of a "common language" allowed for more accurate comunication and also helped push along increased intelligence
The development of language benefited prehistoric people by allowing them to communicate complex ideas, coordinate group activities such as hunting, and pass down knowledge and culture through oral traditions. This facilitated social cohesion, improved cooperation, and enhanced the transmission of important information needed for survival.
I think they didn't, they communicated themselves by signals.
made it pretty easy
it actually brought them in to the neolithic period. agriculture (farming) actually made a surplus of food and people started to settle down and not really move. it began the question of irrigation and domestic animals
The Indo-European parent language was first spoken by a prehistoric people in the Eurasian steppes around 4500-2500 BCE. This language eventually evolved and diversified into many different branches, giving rise to the Indo-European language family spoken by billions of people today.
Tourism development involves broadening the ownership base such that more people benefit from the tourismindustry, skills development, ...
It enables them to stop hunter gathering and settle down into social communities, freeing some people to think about art, science and community.
Was technology important to prehistoric people
In prehistoric times, before there was written language to make a record of it. Possibly before there was much in the way of spoken language, either. Think in terms of cave men.
Those are prehistoric people; I don't think much is known about any language they may have had. From Wikipedia: "Neanderthals made advanced tools, probably had a language (the nature of which is debated and likely unknowable) and lived in complex social groups..."
involves a broad ownership base which means that many people benefit from the tourism industry