The Mesolithic Age (also called the Middle Stone Age) was the period in which people started to domesticate animals an which saw the earliest and still very primitive beginnings of agriculture.
Even so, much food was still the result of hunting and gathering but now it gradually was supplemented by eating the meat of domesticated animals. Substantial agriculture would only start to appear at the very end of the Mesolithic Age.
Early civilizations got food by working together in big bands to collect as much food as possible. They also had special tools made out of animal, bone, tusks, and sharpened stones or sticks to help them during their harvesting. Early food collection methods can be divided into hunters and gatherers.
warm
Mesolithic
I think it’s bows & arrows
Food Shortage is when there is not enough food available for people to eat. If a food shortage persists it turns into a famine.
Be planting seeds
They baught it in the local shop
THEY ATE FOOD
The mesolithic people went through alot of dangers . for the example scarce food cuz of cold weather known as the ice age.
The mesolithic people went through alot of dangers . for the example scarce food cuz of cold weather known as the ice age.
Mammoth and bison.
Meat and some gathered berries and such like.
what is the span of years for the mesolithic people
People lived in the Paeolithic and Mesolithic age was by teaching themselves to do stuff such as cropping and hunting..Tony
We do not know what people were called in the Mesolithic era because they had no way of recording their names.
People on the move in Mesolithic life are typically referred to as hunter-gatherers. They moved from place to place in search of food, hunting animals and gathering plants as their main sources of sustenance. This nomadic lifestyle allowed them to adapt to changing environments and seasons.
Some Mesolithic people were nomadic, moving according to seasonal food availability, while others were semi-nomadic or lived in more settled communities. The lifestyle of Mesolithic peoples varied depending on factors such as geography, climate, resources, and cultural practices.
Probably not, no. Domestication of animals such as horses was introduced in the Neolithic Era which followed the Mesolithic Era.