These people began to gather together and grow crops, it was the first agricultural revolution. As more and more people settled communities grew and this gave birth to civilization as we know it.
The development of agriculture allowed people to stop living as hunters and gatherers and settle in one place. This transition facilitated the domestication of plants and animals, providing a stable food source and enabling communities to establish permanent settlements.
Hunter-gatherers relied on gathering plants and hunting animals for their food, living a nomadic lifestyle to follow available resources in their environment.
One benefit was a more reliable food supply as agriculture allowed for the predictable production of crops. Additionally, it allowed for sedentary living which led to the development of permanent settlements and eventually, the growth of civilizations.
Early hunter gatherers transitioned to village life due to various factors, such as the development of agriculture, which allowed for a more stable and reliable food source. Villages provided protection, social support, and facilitated the division of labor among different community members. Over time, sedentary living also contributed to the growth of populations and the establishment of more complex societies.
Hunter-gatherer societies transitioned to living in settlements due to factors such as the development of agriculture, which provided a more reliable food source, and the domestication of animals. This shift allowed for the accumulation of surplus food, enabling a more sedentary lifestyle. Additionally, living in settlements facilitated social organization, the development of specialized skills, and the establishment of more complex societies.
I think your question is about primitive societies who were hunters and gatherers and used to move from one place to another. The Hunter-gatherer did not stop his habit of moving abruptly. It was a gradual process and involved several factors and the cause for stopping roaming differs from place to place according to the environment they lived. One of the key factors for this change in the primitive societies is rearing. When the primitive man found some cattle and other animals which could be raised and used for his food and daily living purposes, he started to make shelters both for himself and for the animals in grass fields where plenty of food and water for the animals was available abundantly. Alongside, he started to cultivate some early food grains and harvested them time to time which provided him some additional food. Thus, he found it more convenient to lead sedentary life rather than roaming and hunting for the food in the woods.
At the end of the Little Ice Age the climate changed. The warmer weather made fruit and roots much easier to find, but till the invention of agriculture most people were both hunters AND gatherers.
They hunted. And they cooked their food. They also lived in the Southeastern United States. They gathered berries. They had to become hunters and gatherers because a drought came through, and they could no longer use there system of irrigation.
These people began to gather together and grow crops, it was the first agricultural revolution. As more and more people settled communities grew and this gave birth to civilization as we know it.
Hunter-gatherers relied on gathering plants and hunting animals for their food, living a nomadic lifestyle to follow available resources in their environment.
One benefit was a more reliable food supply as agriculture allowed for the predictable production of crops. Additionally, it allowed for sedentary living which led to the development of permanent settlements and eventually, the growth of civilizations.
Hunters and gatherers are different from civilised people because Civilisation was the outcome of Neolithic revolution . Civilisations promoted living at one place usually near rivers for easy access to water for transport and drinking. Hunters on the other hand used to roam around and find food.
Early hunter gatherers transitioned to village life due to various factors, such as the development of agriculture, which allowed for a more stable and reliable food source. Villages provided protection, social support, and facilitated the division of labor among different community members. Over time, sedentary living also contributed to the growth of populations and the establishment of more complex societies.
The Celts made a living as farmers and hunters.
hunters
About 350,000 aboriginal peoples of different origins, in many clan and tribal areas were spread across the continent, living as hunters and gatherers, and warring with each other over territorial, hunting rights, cultural issues and other disputes.
The main elements of hunter-gatherer culture included small, mobile communities, reliance on hunting and gathering for food, living in harmony with nature, oral traditions for passing down knowledge, and egalitarian social structures with shared responsibilities.
lots of things......hunters hunted for food......