under ground tunnels
They hunted the food
They cooked their food with diamond ovens and super fuel.
They cooked their food with diamond ovens and super fuel.
Meat, bread, and anything else they could get cheaply. And to the person who wrote the answer that this is replacing, Neolithic people did cook. Hell, Paleolithic people cooked food. Remember that until the Europeans came, most of the American Indian tribes were Neolithic groups, and they sure cooked food.
Food was stored in large baskets or jars and generally it was dried to keep it from spoiling. Food was cooked over an open fire. For centuries people had fireplaces where they cooked food and got warmth.
Meat, bread, and anything else they could get cheaply. And to the person who wrote the answer that this is replacing, Neolithic people did cook. Hell, Paleolithic people cooked food. Remember that until the Europeans came, most of the American Indian tribes were Neolithic groups, and they sure cooked food.
Neolithic people used their houses to store food by keeping it in pots, baskets, or pits dug into the ground. They also cooked food by using hearths or open fires inside their houses, where they prepared meals using simple tools like clay pots and stone hearths.
Food was stored in large baskets or jars and generally it was dried to keep it from spoiling. Food was cooked over an open fire. For centuries people had fireplaces where they cooked food and got warmth.
Food was stored in large baskets or jars and generally it was dried to keep it from spoiling. Food was cooked over an open fire. For centuries people had fireplaces where they cooked food and got warmth.
70% of people ate living in their developing countries use biomass to heat their homes and cook their food
Food was stored in large baskets or jars and generally it was dried to keep it from spoiling. Food was cooked over an open fire. For centuries people had fireplaces where they cooked food and got warmth.
For the most part they didn't. They needed to hunt, or gather, food nearly every day.