ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS
1 ) What is herding?
2) how did people store food ?
3) what did Archaeologists excavated from Mehrgarh?
ANSWER IN DETAIL
1) how did the development of Agriculture changed the lives of humans?
Answers
1)Herding is the act of bringing individual animals together into a group, maintaining the group, and moving the group from place to place—or any combination of those. Herding can refer either to the process of animals forming herds in the wild, or to human intervention forming herds for some purpose.
2)For centuries, people preserved and stored their food — especially milk and butter — in cellars, outdoor window boxes or even underwater in nearby lakes, streams or wells. ... Before 1830,food preservation used time-tested methods: salting, spicing, smoking, pickling and drying.
3)Ornaments of sea shell, limestone, turquoise, lapis lazuli and sandstone have been found, along with simple figurines of women and animals. Sea shells from far sea shore and lapis lazuli found as far away as present-day Badakshan, Afghanistan shows good contact with those areas.
ANSWER IN DETAIL
1)Farming meant that people did not need to travel to find food. Instead, they began to live in settled communities, and grew crops or raised animals on nearby land. They built stronger, more permanent homes and surrounded their settlements with walls to protect themselves.
Answer:
1) Herding is the act of bringing individual animals together into a group (herd), maintaining the group, and moving the group from place to place—or any combination ...
2) Freezing was an obvious preservation method in the appropriate climates. ... Less than freezing temperatures were used to prolong storage times. Cellars, caves and cool streams were put to good use for that purpose. In America, estates had icehouses built to store ice and food on ice.
3) 5500 BC. In 2001, archaeologists studying the remains of nine men from Mehrgarh made the discovery that the people of this civilization had knowledge of proto-dentistry. ... These findings provide evidence for a long tradition of a type of proto-dentistry in an early farming culture."