answersLogoWhite

0

the new stone age went for 4000 years 8000bc - 4000bc then the copper age began

User Avatar

Wiki User

17y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

Where did the stone age gets its name from?

The Stone Age was a period during which stone was widely used to make implements. This was before people learned to cast/forge metal


How did stone age people use metal?

Metal was not available to 'stone age' man, it had not been discovered.


Was the stone age before ancient Greece?

yes, long long ago


Did the stone age use metal?

Yes the stone age people were using fire to heat up metal nearly 72,000 years ago.


How long did it last the old stone age?

Not many people live long in the stone age. There were not doctors back in the stone age.


What age before information age?

This is the Disinformation Age, before that was the Stone Age


Is the stone age before or after the ice age?

After.


Is the stone age when humans were created?

No. Humans existed before the stone age, the stone age is simply when humanity began developing stone tools


What was the first metal developed to replace stone in the making of tools?

Copper was the first metal used by humans as a replacement for stone in toolmaking. This occurred during the Chalcolithic or Copper Age, which marked the transition between the Neolithic Stone Age and the Bronze Age.


What discovery started the new stone age?

Metal tools


Why is the old stone age called the old stone age?

The old stone age is called the old stone age because that age was when humans first began and made stone implements \ tools out of stone which was not so fine and polished as the tools in the new stone age.The old stone age is also called the palaeolithic age


Was the Stone Age before or after the Iron Age?

The Stone Age occurred before the Iron Age. The Stone Age is divided into different periods (such as the Paleolithic, Mesolithic, and Neolithic), during which early humans used stone tools, while the Iron Age followed when humans began to work with iron tools and weapons.