huts & caves also more stuff
Mesolithic shelters were often temporary structures made from wood, animal hides, and rocks. These shelters were typically built to provide protection from the elements and predators, and were used by hunter-gatherer societies during the Mesolithic period for short-term occupation.
Mesolithic shelters were typically made from materials such as wood, animal hides, and natural substances like mud and branches. These shelters were often simple structures, such as huts or tents, that provided protection from the elements and served as temporary living spaces for Mesolithic hunter-gatherer groups.
Caves, huts and easily built shelters.
The Middle Stone Age is also called the Mesolithic Age or Mesolithic Era.
Mesolithic people used natural materials like wood, branches, and animal hides to construct their homes. They often built temporary shelters such as lean-tos, huts, or teepees, which could be easily moved as they followed wandering animal herds.
Mesolithic people used various types of shelters, including temporary structures made from branches, leaves, and animal hides. They also utilized caves, rock shelters, and overhanging cliffs for protection from the elements. The specific type of shelter depended on the environment and resources available to them.
stone age
In the Mesolithic Age fire was discovered while rubbing two stones together.
The Middle Stone Age is also called the Middle Paleolithic or Mesolithic Ages. There are two different systems of naming. One has Paleolithic and Neolithic Ages, with the Middle Stone Age being equivalent of the Middle Paleolithic Age. The other divides the Stone Age into the Old Stone Age, or Paleolithic, the Middle Stone Age or Mesolithic, and the New Stone age or Neolithic.
no it is not the youngest age . it is the middle stone age
Mesolithic people lived in temporary shelters made of wood, bone, and animal hides. These shelters were often simple structures, such as huts or tents, that could be easily constructed and moved to follow sources of food. They did not typically build permanent settlements during this period.
During the Stone Age, people built shelters using materials like wood, stone, animal hides, and grass. These shelters provided protection from the elements and predators. They often consisted of simple structures such as caves, rock overhangs, huts, or teepees.