around 3000 BC and it started in Sumer
The epochs are normally classified according to the technology that came into use during that time. This strongly suggests that bronze was invented at the very beginning of the Bronze Age.
The start of the Bronze Age.
The start of the Bronze Age.
At the end of the Copper Age came the Bronze Age and this was then replaced by the Iron Age - so bronze was created at the beginning of the Bronze age when people discovered that if you mixed Tin and Copper you got a harder metal alloy called Bronze. This happened at about 2000 BC or four thousand years ago.
False, it marked the beginning of the Bronze Age and later, the Iron Age. There is no "new" Stone Age. There was only 'The' Stone Age, which was largely characterized by man's use of stone tools.
The Stone age began with the first speacies in our genus and, in very few places, countinues to this day. The bronze age began in different places at different times, so you should be asking when <whatever culture> entered the bronze age.
If talking in terms of Graeco-Roman Mythology, the age in which men became craftsmen was the Age of Iron, when men were forced to till the ground because Jupiter/Zeus messed everything up. This is allegedly the age in which industry started, with the production of weapons. The beginning could be the Age of Bronze, but Ovid, my source, is very brief on this point. In history, industry began in the bronze age, when strong bronze tools could be forged, making craftsmen's tasks possible.
The bronze age.
A:3500 BCE more or less marks the beginning of the Bronze Age. Copper was being created, and then bronze. This in turn led to the creation of bronze tools and weapons.
The Iron Age is after the Bronze Age.
the bronze age came after the stone age though in the near east copper age came before bronze age. Hope that helps! :)
The Bronze age