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Paleolithic life

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Paleolithic life
1. Paleolithic rock art: People left their hunting records, drawings of their culture and experiences on cave walls with bright colours, some of which have been preserved up to today. Also, paleolithic people made small statues or carvings out of stone, of figures such as Venus figures. In addition, although it may seem like art to modern world, they used stone tools to hunt and gather.

1. Venus figurines : In places all over the world, from Europe to Russia, figurines of women have been found. They were carved out of stone, antlers, and different materials, but similar in shape, a figure of a women with exaggerated figures. They suggest ancient societies having or worshipping a women goddess, as well as indicating that there may have been communication across lands.

1. Dreamtime: In Paleolithic Australia, there were aboriginal people called the Dreamtime. They had complex and developed stories on the world, as well as rituals which included their people got to their current location. Their outlook on life was based on historical events that took place; all nature was a sense of mirror image to their past events. Also, they had communication with various other groups/societies over a large area of land, exchanging tools, drugs, cultures, and ornaments.

1. Clovis culture: The Clovis people were bands of people scattered all over North America. They were considered one of the first people of America, mostly killing large animals such as bison and mammoth, living along mostly water. Some artefacts suggest that although they were distributed far apart, they may have had some form of communication between the people.

1. Megafaunal extinction: It was the extinction of large animals, such as the mammoth, some species of horses, and camels. Many experts’ theory is that the extinction was caused by change in climate; when the Ice Age ended, temperatures rose and humidity fell. Others say that the Clovis people might have hunted the animals down to

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