because peoplw were un sure if they woul help them hunt or be able to survie
Yes and no because the people made their own tools by a hand and rock.
They used stone tools. Such as stone axes, stone knives, stone ................etc.
Stone tools because that was the time that people used stone tools aka stone age
The first stone age tools were made by Neanderthals.
You need stone, wood, twines and rope to make stone tools. To make stone tools you will need to go to the crafting bench.
Rough or chipped stone tools were markers from the Stone Ages. The Stone Ages were when people first began to use stones as tools for hunting and fishing.
Stone age people spent most of their time making and using stone tools, gathering food, making clothing, constructing shelters, taking care of children, fighting off predators and hostile human neighbors, building fires, and grooming each other. The stone age lasted a very long time. Language, the ability to make complex tools, and the ability to form societies developed slowly. But once established, these things quickly enabled humans to discover better materials than stone for tools; ending the stone age.
The old stone age was characterized by not having tools. The middle stone was characterized by having invented tools. The new stone age was characterized by farming and having better tools.
They used hard stone tools to work softer stone into sculptures.
Migration Hunter-gatherers stone tools
Copper tools did not completely replace stone tools because copper is softer than stone and can wear down more quickly. Additionally, copper tools required more skill and resources to produce compared to stone tools, making them less accessible to everyone. Stone tools were also more readily available in many regions, allowing them to coexist with copper tools rather than being completely replaced.
Stone age people spent most of their time making and using stone tools, gathering food, making clothing, constructing shelters, taking care of children, fighting off predators and hostile human neighbors, building fires, and grooming each other. The stone age lasted a very long time. Language, the ability to make complex tools, and the ability to form societies developed slowly. But once established, these things quickly enabled humans to discover better materials than stone for tools; ending the stone age.