how do you tnk your life differs from that of a cld of the stone age?
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Children living in the Stone Age not only enjoyed a healthier diet, they also seem to have spent a greater amount of time at play and lived a more independent lifestyle than the young visitors to the exhibition.
“The youth of today are basically still Stone Age children, only society has changed,” explains acting museum director Baerbel Auffermann.
“We want to invite them here so that they can rediscover the Stone Age child within.” While parents check out the museum glass cases, their children can experience close—up how life was like in pre—historic times by walking barefoot over bark mulch and wading in mud.
Young visitors can also create their own cave drawings for posterity as well as participate in a Stone Age fashion show wearing fur costumes and bedecked in stone jewellery.
The exhibition’s main attraction is a large reconstructed campsite where parents and children can sit together around a fire and forget for a moment that they are within the walls of a museum rather than having been transported back to the prehistoric past.
Family life 7,000 years ago offered much more freedom to children, who were able to roam more freely and explore nature for themselves.
Unlike in early modernity, children were not considered simply as small adults. Instead, they were able to splash about in mud up to their knees, play with mussels and enjoy adventures.
Although the museum is built at the site in Germany where the first Neanderthal bones were discovered, the current exhibition deals with the prehistory of our own human species, not the Neanderthals.
A special symposium in September will discuss the huge differences between growing up as a child in the Stone Age and today.
The objective is to assist parents in helping their children cope with the attractions of modern technology while still understanding their place in nature.
After all, very few children on their way home from the exhibition would ask their parents to stop for some fresh fish and squirrel burgers, solemnly promising to clean their teeth afterwards with blades of grass.
“The youth of today are basically still Stone Age children, only society has changed,” explains acting museum director Baerbel Auffermann.
“We want to invite them here so that they can rediscover the Stone Age child within.” While parents check out the museum glass cases, their children can experience close—up how life was like in pre—historic times by walking barefoot over bark mulch and wading in mud.
Young visitors can also create their own cave drawings for posterity as well as participate in a Stone Age fashion show wearing fur costumes and bedecked in stone jewellery.
The exhibition’s main attraction is a large reconstructed campsite where parents and children can sit together around a fire and forget for a moment that they are within the walls of a museum rather than having been transported back to the prehistoric past.
Family life 7,000 years ago offered much more freedom to children, who were able to roam more freely and explore nature for themselves.
Unlike in early modernity, children were not considered simply as small adults. Instead, they were able to splash about in mud up to their knees, play with mussels and enjoy adventures.
Although the museum is built at the site in Germany where the first Neanderthal bones were discovered, the current exhibition deals with the prehistory of our own human species, not the Neanderthals.
A special symposium in September will discuss the huge differences between growing up as a child in the Stone Age and today.
The objective is to assist parents in helping their children cope with the attractions of modern technology while still understanding their place in nature.
After all, very few children on their way home from the exhibition would ask their parents to stop for some fresh fish and squirrel burgers, solemnly promising to clean their teeth afterwards with blades of grass.
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Hello there your answer
i think our life differs a lot compared to child of stone age
1) we are given Education
2) we have all electronic gadgets tabs mobiles computers
3) the food we eat differs a lot they eat healthy food from farm while we eat both healthy and unhealthy food like pizzas, burgers etc ...(those were not present at that time)
4) we don't have fresh oxygen to breathe while they have the purest oxygen
5) we live in cities with all luxury and comforts while they live in huts
6) they used to hunt animals for their food while we don't do that
Hope it helps you dear....
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