The hunters and gatherers won't easily get detected by the animals they are trying to hunt.
Ofcourse, by foot. They travel in small family groups.
Yes yes they do
No
they call large groups blooms and small groups swarms
In the Stone Age, the Earth's population was supported by small groups called Hunter-Gatherers.
To modify the statement to reflect that slaves could travel or go on ships in small groups, you could say, "Some enslaved individuals were allowed to travel or embark on ships in small groups, often under strict supervision and limited circumstances." This acknowledges the reality of slave movement while emphasizing the constraints they faced.
Most were hunter gatherer tribes (opportunistic) with small agricultural communities.
Only family groups, mothers with cubs. They are by nature loners.
A group of quokkas is called a mob. They are sociable creatures and live in small family groups or larger communities.
The hunters and gatherers won't easily get detected by the animals they are trying to hunt.
well not exactly Paleolithic people were nomads. They travel from place, to place. They usually travel in groups of 30 because it makes it safer and made the search for food A LOT easier.
In times long past, (usually before the Romans left Britain) ancient communities are groups of people that were either living in a small area (hamlet, village, for instance), or as scattered communities over a larger area.