There was no "industry" during the bronze age...
technology linguistics architecture weather culture
answer is a
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 Iron Age is after the Bronze Age.
This day and age, tourism is our most important industry as far as money goes.
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
Originally defined as a transitional period between the Neolithic Age and the Bronze Age, the Copper Age (or Chalcolithic Age, or Eneolithic Age) is now regarded to be part of the Bronze Age because it is characterized by the use of metals. It was during this time period that early metallurgists found that the addition of tin to copper produced the harder metal, bronze.
The Bronze Age followed the Stone Age. The Bronze Age was characterized by the use of bronze, a metal alloy of copper and tin, which allowed for the production of more advanced tools and weapons.
Bronze is associated with the early civilizations of the Bronze Age, which followed the Old Stone Age (Paleolithic) and the New Stone Age (Neolithic) periods. The Bronze Age is characterized by the use of bronze, a metal alloy made of copper and tin, for tools, weapons, and other objects.
when did the bronze age finish