If you believe in the evolutionary view of history, first came the age of stone tools, followed by the age of bronze tools, and then the age of iron tools. On the other hand, if you take the Bible seriously as a guide to history, then such chronology becomes highly suspect, as, if anything, the biblical story presents a picture of devolution rather than evolution following the flood and the Tower of Babel. According to the biblical perspective, the so-called great civilizations of China, the Indus River Valley, Mesopotamia, Egypt, etc. would be seen as corrupt remnants of an earlier great civilization that was destroyed by the flood and was never fully rebuilt due to the confusion of the languages at the Tower of Babel. The presumption of the greatness of the posited pre-flood civilization is based in part on the fact that Noah was able to build a ship that would have been at least 450 feet long by 75 feet wide by 45 feet high -- a size that has never been rivaled in wood and was only surpassed by steel ships in the 20th century. Obviously, if a ship that size could have been built prior to the flood, then some rather sophisticated tools would have been necessary.
The Bronze Age. Though it is believed there was a Copper Age before the Bronze Age.
stone age
Iron age.
Yes the stone age the Neolithic stone age, then the bronze age and then iron age They happened at different time in different places. People did not stop using flint just because bronze became available or stopped using bronze when iron became available. Bronze is a very useful metal and we still use it today. Flint when struck makes a spark and was used in that capacity long after it stopped being used for tools for lighting fires and to ignite gunpower in guns. In the 20th century it was used to ignite the fuel in cigraette lighters.
It was because of the unicorns in the stone age
In most cases the Bronze Age is followed by the Iron Age.The Axial Age (a subset of the Bronze Age but that involves philosophical as well as social advances) followed by the Iron Age.the silver age
The difference between the Stone and Bronze Age is that during the Stone Age, people used stone to make tools and weapons. During the Bronze Age, people used bronze to make tools and jewelry. In the Bronze Age, the first metal that people used to make tools and jewelry was copper.
The tools were made of iron and steel, as opposed to bronze in the Bronze Age and stone in the Stone Age which preceded it.
# Stone Age # Bronze Age # Iron Age
Of the Stone Age and the Bronze Age, the one that was the earliest was the Stone Age. The Stone Age occurred first followed by the Bronze Age and then the Iron Age.
Bronze took us from the Stone Age to the Iron Age.
The period between the Stone Age and Iron Age is known as the Bronze Age, characterized by the widespread use of bronze for tools and weapons. The Bronze Age saw significant advancements in metallurgy, trade networks, and the development of early civilizations.
Iron age.
computers and stuff.
stone age, bronze age and iron age
banter
Stone Age Bronze Age Iron Age
The Stone Age and the Bronze Age.
Yes the stone age the Neolithic stone age, then the bronze age and then iron age They happened at different time in different places. People did not stop using flint just because bronze became available or stopped using bronze when iron became available. Bronze is a very useful metal and we still use it today. Flint when struck makes a spark and was used in that capacity long after it stopped being used for tools for lighting fires and to ignite gunpower in guns. In the 20th century it was used to ignite the fuel in cigraette lighters.