T2 H 4104 KS2 Introduction To The Stone Age Powerpoint - Ver - 2
T2 H 4104 KS2 Introduction To The Stone Age Powerpoint - Ver - 2
T2 H 4104 KS2 Introduction To The Stone Age Powerpoint - Ver - 2
Photo courtesy of Tadius magazine@flickr.com - granted under creative commons licence - attribution
When was the Stone Age?
The Stone Age covers a huge period of time, over 3 million years!
The Stone Age starts from when the first human like animals came into existence.
The earliest evidence has been found in Africa.
Early humans arrived in Britain more than 800,000 years ago but Britain has not
been constantly lived in since that time due to climate changes.
The ice and the cold temperatures during the last period of time known as the Ice
Age meant that early humans left Britain in search of warmer climates.
At this time Britain was not an island so they could walk across the land into
Europe and Africa.
The Stone Age is broken down
into smaller time periods
Palaeolithic – around 3,000,000 BC
During this long period of time, the earliest hominids (humans or close relatives
of humans), Homo habilis, who used simple stone tools, slowly developed into
the modern humans we call Homo sapiens. Britain was still connected by land to
France and Denmark.
This is the time that farming began, pottery was developed and villages were
built.
Why is it called the Stone Age?
The Stone Age is so called because the earliest humans used stone to make tools
with a sharp edge or point.
There are no existing houses remaining but archaeologists have found marks in
the ground that they believe were made from the timber poles.
The frame may have been round, or conical like a tepee.
Wattle and Daub: A mixture of manure, clay, mud and hay stuck to sticks that
have been woven in and out of the timber frame.
What type of houses did they live in?
Some houses in the Neolithic period, like those uncovered at Skara Brae, were
built from stones.
They were built into mounds of rubbish known as midden. This could include
small stones, shells, mud and animal bones.
They would eat all of the animal. When all the meat was stripped off the bones,
the bones would be smashed so the marrow could be eaten from the inside.
Marrow is high in fat and would have been a good energy source.
Their diet was a lot more varied than you might think, including many plants that
today we treat as weeds.
Photo courtesy of simplyla@flickr.com , Tann@flickr.com, quinet@flickr.com - granted under creative commons licence - attribution
How did they communicate?
Symbols have been found alongside cave paintings in Europe, used repeatedly in
the same clusters in different caves.
Similar symbols have also been found on jewellery, suggesting that there was
possibly a communication system in existence 30,000 years ago.
What did they do?
dug for flint hunted and gathered food made tools and weapons
started fires to cook food and keep warm made objects out of clay
Graves have been found where dogs had been buried with tools, like they
buried humans with.
This tells us that dogs were treated like part of the family.
Photo courtesy of Lennart Tange @flickr.com - granted under creative commons licence - attribution