Pastoralists typically organized themselves into mobile groups or tribes, often governed by kinship ties and leaders who managed resources and migration patterns to follow grazing lands. In contrast, agricultural societies were more settled, developing complex social structures and hierarchical systems, often centered around villages or towns with defined roles in farming, trade, and governance. Both societies utilized communal practices for resource management, but their lifestyles and social organizations were shaped by their primary means of subsistence—herding versus farming.
Writing developed in New Stone Age societies as a means of record-keeping for agricultural activities, trading, and administrative purposes. It allowed for the communication of complex ideas, laws, and rituals, which helped to organize growing societies and establish social order.
The steps the farmers took to organize themselves was that they got together and they got into groups called progressives
Cells, which are the smallest unit of living matter and are often referred to as the building blocks of life, organize themselves into tissues, which then organize themselves into organs, which then organize themselves into systems.
Twelve.
manage agricultural land use and organize labor.
drawing in caves. And killing the rotten apples so they can enjoy the good
guilds
Different societies organize its powers and authority in different ways. Regardless of the form of governance, such societies usually have rules that all the members are expected to adhere to.
they would do the expect same things others would do!
No, non-living things cannot do things like organize themselves. They may be composed of organized units, such as atoms or molecules, but they don't organize together like living things do.
each Cree Indian tribe governs themselves separately from the rest of the nation
guilds