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History -> Archeology

Paleolithic Age

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Hemudu Culture

Hemudu Culture
Hemudu Relics, a neolithic cultural site located in the lower reaches of Yangtze Valley, got its...

Primitives of the Paleolithic Age

Primitives of the Paleolithic Age
Originated from about 2.5 million years till 10,000 years ago, the Paleolithic Age was a material...

The Laoguantai Ruins

The Laoguantai Ruins
The Laoguantai Ruins, composed of the dwelling site and tombs, were ruins before the Yangshao...

Paleolithic Age began around 3,000,000B.C. During this period human beings underwent a long and slow course of physical evolution: first, from ape-man to Homo erectus, than passing through earlier and later stages of Homo sapiens, to the emergence of modern humans having a similar bodily makeup as that of humans today.

During the Paleolithic Age, people were primarily nomadic hunters and gatherers, collecting fruit and fishing. While living in groups and dwelling in caves, they knew about and used fire for heating and cooking. Their first introduction to fire was in the forest where lightning strikes had caused wild-fires. At first the cave dwellers took coals from the forest home to make other fires. Later they learned ways to start their own fire by developing methods to catch sparks from drilling wood or rubbing two pieces of flint stone together. Fire played a significant role in the evolvement of human civilization. It not only provided lighting, heat and protection from wild beasts, but also enabled them to cook food to be better nourished. Fire dramatically changed the living habits of primitive people, much like how the use of the Internet in today's world has changed our methods of communication.

The early implements of the cave dwellers were thick and clumsy having been crudely made by hand-striking. There were only a few kinds avail-able having very basic purposes. As man's knowledge and skills gradually increased they had learned the art of polishing stones for better quality and had developed a variety of tools, making not only stone articles and animal bone needles, but also bows and arrows, a set of devices for spear hurling and an awl for punching holes.

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