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    stone age

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    One of the most famous Stone Age sculptures that still remain today and used as a desktop background and one of the 7 wonders of the worlds Introduction: The Stone Age is a broad prehistoric period during which stone was widely used to make implements with a sharp edge‚ a point‚ or a percussion surface. The period lasted roughly 3.4 million years‚ and ended between 4500 BC and 2000 BC with the advent of metalworking.[1] Stone Age artifacts include tools used by humans and by their predecessor species

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    Also known as “The New Stone Age”‚ the Neolithic Revolution deviated from a nomadic lifestyle‚ opening the doors to sedentary societies. The era followed the Paleolithic‚ or “Stone Age”‚ in which hunter-gatherers began to use tools that simplified their daily life. In the Neolithic Era‚ people began to farm and pursue specific careers because they no longer had to migrate with the livestock that supplied their sustenance. These years changed the blueprint of everyday life‚ and many of its aspects

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    Stone Age Advancements

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    The stone ages were times of great change. The stone ages were times of the early people known as Paleolithic which means old and Neolithic which means new. These people brought great advancements that changed the way people lived. There were great advancements durind the Old Stone Age. One of their advancements of the Paleolithic people was that they learned how to tame fire‚ one of the most important advancements of the stone ages. Fire was good for hunting by surrounding an animal and used

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    The Stone Age Notes

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    1. The Stone Age: The Stone Age‚ Bronze Age‚ and Iron Age Most art in pre – Christian Ireland is abstract. It reflected the technical‚ social and intellectual developments of the time. The pace of change in art and technology was slow at first; it took 5‚000 years from the arrival of the first stone age people for metal technology to be developed in Ireland with the introduction of copper and bronze. It took 1.500 years for iron technology to arrive and 500 more years for the major social and

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    Think About As You Read 1. How did the first people live? 2. What started the agricultural revolution? 3. Why did the Stone Age farmers live near rivers? New Words • Archaeologists • Earth • Tools • Stone Age • Agricultural Revolution • Tame THE FIRST PEOPLE The first people did not live the way we live today. They did not grow food or live in houses. They did not read or write. In this chapter we will learn how the first people lived. Archaeologists help us learn about people

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    Stone Age Research Paper

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    The Stone Age The Stone Age shaped‚ developed and formed our modern day form of living. There are numerous facts and events that have occurred throughout time that are evidence of this. "The Stone Age began as far back as two million years ago in some places" (www.bergen.org‚ April‚ 1997). This was when neanderthals were roaming the world using primitive weapons to hunt animals as well as searching for other sources of food. Since that time the ways of living and even the shape

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    Megalith and Stone

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    Pre-Christian Ireland- Stone age Neolithic Age 3700-2000 B.C. Around 3700 B.C. the hunter gatherers and fishermen were replaced with people from central Europe‚ who travelled to Ireland through England or Scotland. What we know about these farmers comes from their stone graves called megalithic tombs. They placed importance on life after death by building imposing resting placed for the dead rather than for the living. These people were organised farmers with complex social groups. They brought

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    Stone Tools

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    StoneTools A stone tool is‚ in the most general sense‚ any tool made either partially or entirely out of stone. Although stone tool-dependent societies and cultures still exist today‚ most stone tools are associated with prehistoric‚ particularly Stone Age cultures that have become extinct. Archaeologists often study such prehistoric societies‚ and refer to the study of stone tools as lithic analysis. Stone has been used to make a wide variety of different tools throughout history‚ including arrow

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    New Age Movement

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    The New Age movement is hardly novel! Its philosophy is rooted in ancient traditions‚ often based on mystical experiences‚ each within a different context. | Anthropologically‚ there have always been (wo)men within "primitive" societies who were looked upon as possessing special knowledge and power. Medicine men‚ or shamans‚ had undergone a spontaneous catharsis‚ or were initiated and felt called upon to maintain contact with the spirit world for the clan. When communities became more complex

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    The New Age Movement

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    Assess the view that cults‚ sects and New Age movements are fringe organisations that are inevitably short-lived and of little influence in contemporary society. (33 marks) There are in fact a range of debates about the nature of cults‚ sects and New Age movements. Some sociologists suggest that they are fringe organisations in the sense that they appeal to only a minority of the population‚ however Heelas found a large increase in New Age activity in his Kendal research. Other sociologists‚

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