History, asked by ilozen08, 8 months ago

Hunter-gatherers still exist today in some parts of the world, especially in the Amazon basin in South America. In what ways might these communities be similar to or different from the hunter-gatherers of the Paleolithic age?

Answers

Answered by vinothiniHY
16

Neolithic Revolution to Modern Day

Modern-day hunter-gatherers endure in various pockets around the globe. Among the more famous groups are the San, a.k.a. the Bushmen, of southern Africa, and the Sentinelese of the Andaman Islands in the Bay of Bengal, known to fiercely resist all contact with the outside world.

Answered by shreyashkadam217
11

Answer:

Before the agricultural revolution, human beings spent more time on this planet as hunter-gatherers, relying on nature’s resources and their own survival instincts to sustain themselves. The advent of farming changed all of that. With the increasing contact hunter-gathering societies had with farmers and herders, hunter-gatherer populations decreased in sweeping numbers throughout the course of history.

Some theorize that by the end of this century, the last hunting and gathering societies will vanish, taking with them an “irreplaceable link to our past”. Incredibly, here are some of the few tribes that have managed to maintain much of their independence as hunter-gatherers.

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