Lotsa stones.
Yes, land bridges such as the Bering Land Bridge allowed prehistoric humans from the Stone Age and Middle Stone Age to migrate to different parts of the world. These land connections facilitated the movement of populations between continents during periods of lower sea levels.
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Of the Stone Age and the Bronze Age, the one that was the earliest was the Stone Age. The Stone Age occurred first followed by the Bronze Age and then the Iron Age.
All of the Stone Age was prehistoric. When it is divided into two parts they are the Old Stone Age (Paleolithic) and the new Stone Age (Neolithic).
There's actually three parts to the Stone Age. There's the Old Stone Age, the Middle Stone Age, and the New Stone Age. To learn more about them you can Google them, there actually pretty interesting!
In the Stone Age, agriculture involved simple methods such as slash-and-burn farming, where trees and vegetation were cut down and burned to create space for crops. Seeds were then planted in the cleared land and harvested by hand. Stone tools were used for tasks such as tilling the land, planting seeds, and harvesting crops.
During the Old Stone Age, the land was mostly covered by forests, grasslands, and tundra. The environment was characterized by a colder climate with fluctuating temperatures and varying landscapes such as glaciers, rivers, and mountains. Humans were dependent on hunting and gathering for survival, utilizing stone tools for their daily activities.
He ate it
old stone age
it is new stone age
The Stone Age is divided into the Paleolithic Age (Old Stone Age) and the Neolithic Age (New Stone Age). The Paleolithic Age is characterized by the use of simple stone tools, while the Neolithic Age saw the development of agriculture and more complex tools and technologies.
the stone age used different resources . the stone age used stone and the iron age used iron