They were farming, made pots, weaved cloth, had polished tools and weapons, trade by barter and could make huge stone monuments
When did domestication of animals begin? The answer is at the end of the old stone age and the beginning of the new stone age.
they both used stone tools
5,000 years ago.
The "basement" of the Colosseum was almost a world in itself. There were holding pens for the animals, rooms for the humans, latrines, elevators for raising and lowering scenery and animals and sometimes men, and the pipes and pumps to both flood and drain the arena.
Wolves naturally hung around with humans, as they had some sort of spiritual connection. Wild dogs did the same, and eventually were bred and tamed into domestication. The dogs you see today are descendants of those that first befriended man about 15 thousand years ago.
nothing
I believe sometime in the New Stone Age humans had learned to tame and breed animals for their own use.
Its harmless to humans and animals, but it damages buildings by eating away the rock/stone/metal.
You can kill part of the earth, including humans. Because humans eat some types of animals, and if we don't have the animals to eat, all humans can die. The animals will die too, they are just like humans.
Early stone tools were used by early humans for various tasks such as hunting, cutting, scraping, and digging. They were essential for everyday survival, helping humans to process food, build shelters, and make clothing. These tools were vital for shaping the environment and facilitating the development of early human societies.
No. Humans existed before the stone age, the stone age is simply when humanity began developing stone tools
Depending on what is being weighed a stone can be 8, 12, 14, 15 or 24 pounds. Assuming we're talking humans or animals the weight/ stone is 14 lb. so 50 lb would be 3.6 stone.
The invention of tools helped the Stone Age people hunt larger animals more safely
During the Stone Age, humans learned to create tools from stones, hunt animals for food, make fire, and create simple shelters for protection. They also began developing social structures and communication skills to survive and thrive in their environments.
No, there was no electricity in the Stone Age. The use of electricity came much later in human history, with the development of technology in the late 19th century.
STONE"s
the animals that stone age people killed were mammoths, deer, mostly big animals.