Neolithic people learned that domesticated animals would be loyal and hunt for them if they were taken good care of.
Neolithic people learned that domesticated animals would be loyal and hunt for them if they were taken good care of.
Neolithic people ate animals like sheep,goats,wild bulls and saber tooth tigers.
because the people in the Neolithic age learned how to desiccate animals and learn to make food for them self's
the neolithic people domesticated animals and grew crops. When they needed meat the would kill an animal and eat it
Neolithic people learned how to farm through a process of trial and error, observation of plants and animals, and experience over generations. They gradually developed techniques for clearing land, planting seeds, and tending to crops based on their understanding of the natural world and their needs for sustenance. This transition from hunter-gatherer to agricultural society marked a significant shift in human history.
Neolithic people survived by transitioning from a nomadic lifestyle to settled agricultural communities. They domesticated plants and animals for food, learned to create tools and pottery, and developed simple irrigation systems for farming. This shift allowed them to produce a more stable food supply and led to the development of more complex societies.
they ate animals and they hunted them
the New age when people learned how to farm Actually its the New Stone Age.
The Neolithic revolution is a time in which society greatly changed. This is the time in which cities came into existence, and people stopped wandering constantly.
they hunted animals of ate plantes:) have a nice day
During the Neolithic Revolution when people began to become sedentary and agriculture began to be used widely as a source of food. Animals were first domesticated in order to produce food, and pets came afterwards.
People first learned to farm around 10,000 years ago during the Neolithic Revolution. This was a period of transition from hunting and gathering to settled agriculture, leading to the domestication of plants and animals. Early farming practices emerged independently in different regions of the world.