feet and dodo
During the New Stone Age, or Neolithic period, people built homes using mud bricks, thatch roofs, and stone foundations. They typically lived in rectangular or circular structures that varied in size depending on the region and availability of resources. These homes were often grouped together in settlements for protection and communal living.
Yes. The native americans were stone age people when first encountered by Europeans. Different tribes had different kinds of homes: Longhouses, Wigwams, Teepees, Chickees, Adobe Houses, Igloos, Grass Houses, Wattle and Daub houses, etc. It is reasonable to assume that stone age peoples elsewhere in the past also built homes of various types.
No, the cottage industry was not part of the Stone Age. The cottage industry emerged during the Industrial Revolution as a form of decentralized production carried out in rural homes or small workshops. The Stone Age refers to a prehistoric period characterized by the use of stone tools.
Early Stone Age people typically lived in homes made of materials such as wood, stone, mud, and animal hides. These homes were often simple structures, such as huts or caves, designed to provide shelter and protection from the elements. The type of materials used for construction would depend on the specific resources available in the region where the people lived.
No, I think that in the stone age cavemen would have lived caves and would consider it to be their homes. After all, they are called cavemen so it's obvious that they lived in caves!!!! If they lived in houses they'd be housemen or somethinglike that.
During the New Stone Age, or Neolithic period, people built homes using mud bricks, thatch roofs, and stone foundations. They typically lived in rectangular or circular structures that varied in size depending on the region and availability of resources. These homes were often grouped together in settlements for protection and communal living.
No
they didn't. learn things.
they didn't. learn things.
They used materials that were readily available--stone--to build their shelters and to make tools.
Yes. The native americans were stone age people when first encountered by Europeans. Different tribes had different kinds of homes: Longhouses, Wigwams, Teepees, Chickees, Adobe Houses, Igloos, Grass Houses, Wattle and Daub houses, etc. It is reasonable to assume that stone age peoples elsewhere in the past also built homes of various types.
No, the cottage industry was not part of the Stone Age. The cottage industry emerged during the Industrial Revolution as a form of decentralized production carried out in rural homes or small workshops. The Stone Age refers to a prehistoric period characterized by the use of stone tools.
Early Stone Age people typically lived in homes made of materials such as wood, stone, mud, and animal hides. These homes were often simple structures, such as huts or caves, designed to provide shelter and protection from the elements. The type of materials used for construction would depend on the specific resources available in the region where the people lived.
They were hunter and gathers so they mainly looked for food and tried to find/build shelter.
No, I think that in the stone age cavemen would have lived caves and would consider it to be their homes. After all, they are called cavemen so it's obvious that they lived in caves!!!! If they lived in houses they'd be housemen or somethinglike that.
The stone age huts were made of a combination of materials including, wood, animal skins, stone, and animal bones.
The paleolithic peoples did not have mobile homes. The 'lithic' part of that word means 'stone'. -these were stone age hunters and gatherers who lived in caves and temporary wood shelters, they had not yet even worked out how to cut wood with any accuracy.