Skip to main content

Questions tagged [paleolithic]

The period from about 2.6 million years ago, when the first stone tools may have been made, up to around 10,000 BC. Also known as the 'Old Stone Age'.

9 votes
2 answers
2k views

Were there any stone vessels (including mortars) made in Paleolithic?

Stone mortars and pestles have been used by the Epi-Paleolithic (Mesolithic) Kebaran culture (the Levant with Sinai) from 22000 to 18000 BC to crush grains and other plant material. The Kebaran ...
Arwenz's user avatar
  • 209
-2 votes
3 answers
434 views

Why have we settled while foragers used to be healthier instead? [closed]

Evidence (See below) shows that foragers used to be healthier than farmers in pre-history. Also, foragers worked between 4-6h to have all of their needs while farmers used to work for longer periods. ...
user2919910's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
117 views

Are there examples of African/European/American hunter-gatherer's constructions?

Often people think about hunter-gatherers as primitives. "Dark Emu" book is a great example of popular history book that refutes those beliefs. Aboriginal constructions could be quite ...
Vashu's user avatar
  • 331
2 votes
0 answers
109 views

Is there any evidence that people in the late Pleistocene understood that their environment was changing?

Of all the periods of geographic and climactic transformation our planet has undergone, the late Pleistocene is of particular interest to historians, since it was the first to be witnessed by human ...
Tom Hosker's user avatar
  • 2,337
2 votes
2 answers
297 views

Roughly how many people were in a Magdalenian group? (And Gravettian?)

The book "The Creation of Inequality" (Marcus & Fannery, 2012) says the Magdalenian groups were much larger than the Gravettian groups but doesn't provide a clear number (or I did not ...
JinSnow's user avatar
  • 465
5 votes
1 answer
500 views

Why have so few paleo-Indian skeletons been found?

I recently read Charles C. Mann's 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus, Second Edition, and was intrigued by the footnote on page 174: [Aleš] Hrdlička's complaint about the lack of ...
ruakh's user avatar
  • 157
-1 votes
1 answer
263 views

Did Palaeolithic humans live longer than early Neolithic farmers?

Please quote published research. There is work on Paleolithic teeth that is often used as evidence to suggest that Paleolithic humans lived longer than early farmers (http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/...
Shashir Reddy's user avatar
4 votes
2 answers
438 views

Did humans hunt with dogs before planting crops for food?

Were humans hunting with dogs before they were planting crops?
user25200's user avatar
25 votes
2 answers
1k views

Is there an accepted explanation for multiple independent "cradles of civilization"?

Human history begins with millions of years of hunter-gathering and lithic technology: The Paleolithic ... is ... distinguished by the development of the most primitive stone tools ... and covers ...
Arnon Weinberg's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
165 views

How did first humans build tools? [closed]

I'm referring this question in this way and tell me if I'm wrong: The first humans were just surrounded by: rocks, trees, plants, water, sand, animals, fruits. So how just with hands, mouth, feet ...
Pichi Wuana's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
418 views

Why are cave paintings so few and rare? [closed]

Just watched a few documentaries about cave paintings. While I acknowledge the importance of discovery, I can't help but question one simple thing - why are there so few paintings in those caves? ...
Mike's user avatar
  • 29
6 votes
1 answer
970 views

When were domesticated animals tethered on a pole with a rope?

Domestication of plants and animals are thought to have happened during the neolithic period, roughly between 13000-7000 years ago. Now I'm interested of the history of using rope and central pole to ...
MarkokraM's user avatar
  • 523
3 votes
0 answers
103 views

Has there been any evidence of Denisovan DNA outside of the Denisova Caves? [closed]

Is this the only known source of Denisova hominins genetics?
Kamic's user avatar
  • 209
9 votes
4 answers
3k views

Why are there no dogs pictured in paleolithic cave paintings?

It has been described before that the occurence of reindeers is strangely low, while this was the main food source. But isn't it even stranger for dogs? Recent genetic research suggest that dogs were ...
HannesH's user avatar
  • 1,497
4 votes
1 answer
210 views

Homo Sapiens Sapiens: Are genetic studies to be trusted?

Bryan Sykes, an Oxford scientist, wrote a book called "The Seven Daughters of Eve" in which, using studies of mitochondrial DNA, he had claimed to be able to trace nearly all living Europeans back to ...
user avatar

15 30 50 per page