English, asked by bharathirajap044, 5 months ago

Directions (1 to 4) :Read the passage and answer the questions accordingly. The unique Iron Age ExperimentaI Center at Lejre, about 25 miles west of Copenhagen, serves as a museum, a classroom and a place to get away from it all. How did people live during the Iron Age? How did they support themselves? What did they eat and how did they cuItivate the land? These and a myriad of other questions prodded the pioneers of the Lejre experiment. Living in the open and working 10 hours a day, volunteers from all over Scandinavia led by 30 experts, built the first viIlage in the ancient encampment in a matter of months. The house walls were of clay, the roofs of hay-all based on original designs. Then came the second stage- getting back to the basics of living. Families were invited to stay in the ”prehistoric village" for a week or two at a time and rough it in the Iron Age-style. Initially, this experiment proved none too easy for modern Danes accustomed to central heating, but it convinced the center that there was something to the Lejre project. Little by little, the modern Iron Agers Iearned that their huts were, after all, habitable. The problems were numerous - smoke belching out from the rough-and-ready fireplaces into the rooms and so on. These problems, however, have led to some discoveries: domed smoke ovens made of clay, for example, give out more heat and consume less fuel than an open fire,, and when correctly stoked, they are practically smokeless. 1. What would be the most suitable title for the passage

1 point

Modern techniques find their way into prehistoric villages

Co existence of ancient and modern times

Glad to be living in the 21st century

Turning back time

Directions (1 to 4) :Read the passage and answer the questions accordingly. The unique Iron Age ExperimentaI Center at Lejre, about 25 miles west of Copenhagen, serves as a museum, a classroom and a place to get away from it all. How did people live during the Iron Age? How did they support themselves? What did they eat and how did they cuItivate the land? These and a myriad of other questions prodded the pioneers of the Lejre experiment. Living in the open and working 10 hours a day, volunteers from all over Scandinavia led by 30 experts, built the first viIlage in the ancient encampment in a matter of months. The house walls were of clay, the roofs of hay-all based on original designs. Then came the second stage- getting back to the basics of living. Families were invited to stay in the ”prehistoric village" for a week or two at a time and rough it in the Iron Age-style. Initially, this experiment proved none too easy for modern Danes accustomed to central heating, but it convinced the center that there was something to the Lejre project. Little by little, the modern Iron Agers Iearned that their huts were, after all, habitable. The problems were numerous - smoke belching out from the rough-and-ready fireplaces into the rooms and so on. These problems, however, have led to some discoveries: domed smoke ovens made of clay, for example, give out more heat and consume less fuel than an open fire,, and when correctly stoked, they are practically smokeless. 1. What would be the most suitable title for the passage

1 point

Modern techniques find their way into prehistoric villages

Co existence of ancient and modern times

Glad to be living in the 21st century

Turning back time

Answers

Answered by janendra2855
34

Answer:

Directions (1 to 4) :Read the passage and answer the questions accordingly. The unique Iron Age ExperimentaI Center at Lejre, about 25 miles west of Copenhagen, serves as a museum, a classroom and a place to get away from it all. How did people live during the Iron Age? How did they support themselves? What did they eat and how did they cuItivate the land? These and a myriad of other questions prodded the pioneers of the Lejre experiment. Living in the open and working 10 hours a day, volunteers from all over Scandinavia led by 30 experts, built the first viIlage in the ancient encampment in a matter of months. The house walls were of clay, the roofs of hay-all based on original designs. Then came the second stage- getting back to the basics of living. Families were invited to stay in the ”prehistoric village" for a week or two at a time and rough it in the Iron Age-style. Initially, this experiment proved none too easy for modern Danes accustomed to central heating, but it convinced the center that there was something to the Lejre project. Little by little, the modern Iron Agers Iearned that their huts were, after all, habitable. The problems were numerous - smoke belching out from the rough-and-ready fireplaces into the rooms and so on. These problems, however, have led to some discoveries: domed smoke ovens made of clay, for example, give out more heat and consume less fuel than an open fire,, and when correctly stoked, they are practically smokeless. 1. What would be the most suitable title for the passage

1 point

Modern techniques find their way into prehistoric villages

Co existence of ancient and modern times

Glad to be living in the 21st century

Turning back time

Directions (1 to 4) :Read the passage and answer the questions accordingly. The unique Iron Age ExperimentaI Center at Lejre, about 25 miles west of Copenhagen, serves as a museum, a classroom and a place to get away from it all. How did people live during the Iron Age? How did they support themselves? What did they eat and how did they cuItivate the land? These and a myriad of other questions prodded the pioneers of the Lejre experiment. Living in the open and working 10 hours a day, volunteers from all over Scandinavia led by 30 experts, built the first viIlage in the ancient encampment in a matter of months. The house walls were of clay, the roofs of hay-all based on original designs. Then came the second stage- getting back to the basics of living. Families were invited to stay in the ”prehistoric village" for a week or two at a time and rough it in the Iron Age-style. Initially, this experiment proved none too easy for modern Danes accustomed to central heating, but it convinced the center that there was something to the Lejre project. Little by little, the modern Iron Agers Iearned that their huts were, after all, habitable. The problems were numerous - smoke belching out from the rough-and-ready fireplaces into the rooms and so on. These problems, however, have led to some discoveries: domed smoke ovens made of clay, for example, give out more heat and consume less fuel than an open fire,, and when correctly stoked, they are practically smokeless. 1. What would be the most suitable title for the passage

1 point

Modern techniques find their way into prehistoric villages

Co existence of ancient and modern times

Glad to be living in the 21st century

Turning back time

Answered by veda2302
0

Answer:

what is the meaning of the sentence

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