Well farmers for one had a strict diet, with what ever they were growing, this caused not a very helthy nutrietious diet so the foragers were also in a way alot healthier. Secondly if anything happened to the famers crops they were basically screwed since they depended on in earlier societies only a single crop. Foragers could easily move on to a new location if animals got scarce. btw...sorry for the spelling errors >.<
Settled foragers had a more varied diet, less exposure to diseases from living in close proximity to domesticated animals, and often had shorter work hours due to the efficiency of hunting and gathering compared to agriculture.
Humans transitioned from hunter-gatherers to farmers due to the development of agriculture around 10,000 years ago. This shift was driven by the need to secure a stable food supply, leading to the domestication of plants and animals. Farming allowed for more efficient food production, leading to settled communities and the beginnings of civilization.
Homo sapiens are better hunters than Australopithecus and Homo erectus due to a combination of factors such as increased brain size, better communication and coordination skills, the development of more sophisticated tools and hunting techniques, and the ability to adapt to various environments. These evolutionary advantages have allowed Homo sapiens to become more efficient and successful hunters compared to their ancestors.
Disease did spread faster in agrarian societies than in hunter-gatherer societies due to settled populations living in close proximity to livestock and other humans, facilitating the transmission of pathogens. Additionally, agricultural practices such as irrigation provided breeding grounds for disease-carrying vectors like mosquitoes.
Human beings were hunter-gatherers for over 90% of human history, which spans roughly 200,000 years. This lifestyle involved hunting animals and gathering plants for food, rather than engaging in agriculture or raising livestock. The shift from hunting and gathering to settled agriculture began around 10,000 years ago.
Nomadic lifestyle: constant movement, reliance on hunting and gathering, live in temporary shelters. Sedentary lifestyle: settled in one place, reliance on agriculture, live in permanent dwellings.
Farmers had no variety in their diet, but foragers ate whatever they came upon. Also, if a farmers crops get damaged, they have no food, but a forager can just move on.
Farmers are better than teacher s bcuz they grow food for the country
Food producers have less craft specialization than food foragers. The answer is false.
yes they are! they are wey better than fair traders!
Teachers are better than Farmers because farmers stay in the country and teachers stay in the city that way teachers stay updated on what new product has come out. Interesting answer. How do country folks learn? What about teachers that are also farmers? A teacher is not better than a farmer. The two are merely different. They are often combined in to one human.
Doctors are not better than farmers. Doctors and farmers both have a role to play in society. While in specific instances doctors can be very important, if both groups were to vanish, the absence of food would be noticed before the absence of plastic surgeons.
No job profession is better than another, except for monetary reasons. With that said, teaching is better than farming because teachers get more money for what they do than what farmers get for what they produce. But that's really where it ends. Farmers can be and often are teachers and vice versa.
It is not helpful to claim that doctors are better than farmers; farming is an honorable profession and one upon which everybody, including doctors, depends, since we all need to eat. It is also true that it is much easier to learn how to farm, than to become a doctor. Medicine is a more skilled profession. Also, generally more highly paid.
The England army were better trained because the colonies army were a bunch of farmers.
True. Horticulturalists, as foragers, have an ideology of living as part of nature, rather than attempting to control nature. Their belief systems, animism, and shamanism highlight the notion of living with nature.
Probably, because the bees will pollinate their crops sufficiently, allowing for more production.
A doctor is more important than a farmer because doctor do help us when ill.