Stone age homes

    • [DOC File]Name:

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      Homes became permanent. In New Stone Age villages and cities, people living close together had to cooperate; they most likely created rules to live by to get along with each other. This led to civilization, which actually means "to live in a city."

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    • [DOCX File]How 2 Become

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      In the box below are things that you would have found in both Stone Age homes and Iron Age homes. Sort the things into columns in the table underneath – look at each thing and decide whether it would be in a Stone Age home, an Iron Age home, or both! Fireplace. Small rooms. Wooden rooves. A loom. Thatched rooves. Beds. Stone Age home:

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    • The Neolithic Revolution (Agricultural Revolution/New ...

      Old Stone Age: People were wandering hunter/gathers with no established communities (NOMADS). People had few specialized skills. People had to search for food. New Stone Age: People were farmers, animal herders with permanent homes in permanent villages (cities) …

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      Another name for the New Stone Age: Neolithic Era. How long did it last? 12,000 to 6,000 years ago. Ways that man lived or survived: 1. hunting animals and gathering roots, berries, leaves, and seeds. 2. hunting in groups. 3. stone, bone, wooden tools. 4. cave art . 5. fire. 6. Nomads: people that had no settled homes. 7. used caves, animal ...

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    • [DOCX File]Literacy WAGOLL - Home

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      Stone Age living was much more basic than ours in the present day (2015). Early in the Stone Age, prehistoric people lived in natural shelters (caves and crevasses) that they found. When the sun had gone down, they would sleep in the shelter to keep them warm and comfortable. Living in temporary homes continued until there was a need to build ...

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    • [DOC File]Kent State University

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      It was still the Stone Age. Later, in the Neolithic (“New Stone”) Age, people had settled in Europe and were practicing farming and herding. But as Neolithic Man needed more space and more food, he began to move again. By 3500 B.C. farmers and herders had reached a group of islands to the north of Scotland- the Orkneys.

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    • [DOC File]The Stone Age: From Hunting and Gathering to Farming

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      Archaeologists divide the Stone Age into two periods, the Old Stone Age and the New Stone Age. During the Old Stone Age, people did not yet know how to farm. They lived by hunting animals and gathering roots, berries, leaves, and seeds. They used stone to make hunting weapons and tools to cut meat, scrape animal hides, cut skins to make ...

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    • [DOCX File]www.perryfields-pri.sandwell.sch.uk

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      WALT: understand how pre-historic people lived and compare houses from Stone Age to Iron Age. What is the roof made of? What are the walls made of? What are the windows made of? Does It have a chimney? What would it be like to live in? Stone Age. Bronze Age. Iron Age. Your home. Draw a picture of each type of home. Stone Age.

      paleolithic houses


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