that they use diffrent clothing
Some different cultures that existed in the late Stone Age (also known as the Neolithic period) include the Natufian culture in the Levant, the Vinca culture in southeastern Europe, the Yangshao culture in China, and the Jomon culture in Japan. These cultures are known for their advancements in agriculture, pottery, and settlement patterns.
The Stone Age is called so because it was characterized by the widespread use of stone tools and weapons by early human societies. It is divided into three periods: Paleolithic (early Stone Age), Mesolithic (middle Stone Age), and Neolithic (late Stone Age), based on the technology used during each period.
Yes, Cro-Magnons lived during the Upper Paleolithic period, which is commonly referred to as the Late Stone Age. They were early anatomically modern humans who lived in Europe around 40,000 to 10,000 years ago.
A clean break does not exist between the Middle Stone Age and Late Stone Age. During the Middle Stone Age, people also lived by hunting and gathering. The terms are used for the convenience of archaeologists to distinguish between two cultures. The two groups may have existed at the same time and side by side and probably did. The people of the Middle Stone Age depended on hunting and fishing. Their tools reflect that lifestyle. Then people adopted a life that focused on agriculture. When people worked in agriculture, they settled in one area and had more time. They made their tools of better quality and they made more of them. Among the tools they developed were scrapers. They would kill an animal for food and use his skin for clothes, and then use the scraper on his skin. That way the skin would last longer than one just pulled off the animal. They took the time to set up the equipment to make bows and arrows. They built kilns to cure the wood and make arrows that would fly straight. They made fish hooks and better axes. Thus the difference between Middle and New Stone Age was that between a society on the move and one settled down. The society that had settled down could have specialists in stone working. Arrow makers (fletchers) could set up kilns. Farmers could grow grain. They could leave far more stone artifacts behind.
Yes! Farmers back then grew it in africa! there have been many theries but no one knows which is really true! (this might be the wrong answer so u might want to look it up on googl or somewhere else too!)
Some different cultures that existed in the late Stone Age (also known as the Neolithic period) include the Natufian culture in the Levant, the Vinca culture in southeastern Europe, the Yangshao culture in China, and the Jomon culture in Japan. These cultures are known for their advancements in agriculture, pottery, and settlement patterns.
Yes, Coade stone is a man-made material, developed in the late 18th century by Eleanor Coade, an Englishwoman. It is a type of artificial stone made from a mixture of clay, silica, and other materials, which is then fired at high temperatures to create a durable and weather-resistant product. Coade stone was widely used for architectural ornamentation and sculptures during the Georgian period.
A paleolithic kitchen consisted of a place on the ground where a fire was built. Cooking was probably done on a spit. During most of the paleolithic, there was no pottery, though it was developed late on and existed in parts of the world. There were stone knives and choppers, stone axes, and a variety of other tools made of wood, stone, and bone. Shells and reeds might also have been used.
Decline of traditional African cultures.
Study more boy.
During the late 8th Century BCE - they copied it, with some modification, from the Phoenician alphabet which was developed in the previous century.
Late 60's early '70's sounds about right; along with "have a nice day."
Francis Galton developed the theory of Eugenics
In the late 1970's
yes
A tank developed by Germany in late WW2.
Fried potato chips was developed somewhere in the area that is now Belgium some time during the late middle ages. It is not known exactly when, where or by whom.