DK - WOW! The Visual Encyclopedia of Everything

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HUNTER-GATHERERS ▲
For most of prehistory, people lived by hunting animals and
gathering wild plant foods. Hunter-gatherers lived in small
bands, which were often on the move, following herds of
animals and looking for fresh sources of food. The first humans
lived in Africa, but gradually spread across the globe, settling
first in Asia and then Europe. Humans reached Australia by
50,000 bce, and the Americas between 30,000–14,000 bce.

Iron pyrite Flint blade

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THE AGE OF FARMING
Between 10,000–9,000 ▲
bce, people in the Middle East
invented a new way of life – farming. They learned to
store and sow the seeds of plants, and to breed animals,
such as sheep and goats. By controlling their food supplies,
farming people were able to settle down in permanent
villages. As the supply of food became more regular,
populations rose and the farming way of life spread.

Our distant past, before writing was invented, is called
prehistory. Without written records, we rely on the
objects that prehistoric people left behind them, such
as tools, to find out how they lived. The first tools, made
around 2.5 million years ago, were of stone, bone, and
wood. Later, prehistoric people learned to use metals –
first copper, then bronze, and finally iron.

Prehistory


Polished axe
This axe, with
its polished flint
blade, was used
by farmers to
clear land to
create fields.

Making fire
Prehistoric people
learned to make
fire by striking
flints against lumps
of iron pyrite.

Scraper The best stone
tools were made from
flint, which forms
sharp edges. This
tool would have
been used for
scraping animal
skins clean.

Antler pick European
farming people mined
for flints, digging
with picks made
from deer antlers.

Arrowheads
Farming people
continued to hunt
wild animals, using
bows and arrows
with skilfully shaped
flint heads.

Chopper This chopper was
made 2.5 million years ago,
by chipping a pebble to
make a cutting edge. It
would have been used
to smash bones to get to
the marrow inside.

Antler hammer
A toolmaker
used an antler
hammer to
strike flakes
from a flint
to shape it.

Spear thrower From
30,000 bce, people made
carvings of the animals they
hunted. This spear thrower is
in the shape of a mammoth.

Sickle A long flint, mounted
in a wooden handle, forms
a farmer’s sickle, used
to harvest grain.

Adze This adze,
with its flint blade
set in a wooden
sleeve, was used
to shape wood.

Handaxe Invented
1.5 million years ago,
the handaxe was the
first stone tool made
to a design. The
pointed end was
used for cutting
meat or digging
up edible roots.
Flint

Mammoth-shaped hook held the
spear in a long, straight handle,
which launched the spear with
great force and speed

228_229_Prehistory.indd 228 03/01/19 12:11 PM

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