Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. In Stone Age: Lower Paleolithic. On the basis of the very rich materials from the Somme Valley in the north of France and the Thames Valley in the south of England, two main Lower Paleolithic traditions have been recognized in western Europe. These are as follows: (1) bifacial-tool,…. Read More.

  2. Sep 29, 2017 · Lower- or Early Palaeolithic - From the earliest known tool use around 2,6 million years ago, with simple cores, flaked pieces, and later large bifaces, up to roughly 250,000 years ago;

  3. Paleolithic groups developed increasingly complex tools and objects made of stone and natural fibers. Language, art, scientific inquiry, and spiritual life were some of the most important innovations of the Paleolithic era.

  4. Paleolithic Period, or Old Stone Age, Ancient technological or cultural stage characterized by the use of rudimentary chipped stone tools. During the Lower Paleolithic ( c. 2,500,000200,000 years ago), simple pebble tools and crude stone choppers were made by the earliest humans.

  5. Lower Paleolithic (LP): A prehistoric Period. An assortment of prehistoric technologies common to some areas of Eurasia from ~1.9 million years ago to ~20,000 years ago, characterized by the...

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › PaleolithicPaleolithic - Wikipedia

    The social organization of the earliest Paleolithic (Lower Paleolithic) societies remains largely unknown to scientists, though Lower Paleolithic hominins such as Homo habilis and Homo erectus are likely to have had more complex social structures than chimpanzee societies.

  7. Jan 1, 2014 · The Paleolithic is the term applied to a very broad, early period of human prehistory beginning with the first archaeological evidence of stone toolmaking approximately 2.6 Ma, through to the end of the Pleistocene epoch about 10,000 years ago, when the last continental glaciation receded.

  1. People also search for