The unique iron age experimental centre at lejre, about 40 km 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 cultivate 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 village 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 iron age-style. Initially, this experiment prove
Answers
Answer:
The options to the question are
a) It initiated the project
b) It eagerly supported it
c) It felt the project was very unique
d) It was apprehensive about it
The answer is a) It initiated the project
Center's initial outlook towards the Lejre project
Center's initial outlook towards the Lejre project- From the passage it shows that the center initially initiated the project with a scope of studying the lifestyle of Iron Age people.
Center's initial outlook towards the Lejre project- From the passage it shows that the center initially initiated the project with a scope of studying the lifestyle of Iron Age people. - The center was convinced that though the practical approach of the Lejre project was difficult, it will surely be beneficial in the discovery of something valuable about the Iron Age people.
Explanation:
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Concept Introduction:
The third and last period in human prehistory and protohistory is known as the Iron Age. The Bronze Age came before it, followed by the Stone Age. The notion has mostly been used to describe Europe as well as the Old Near East, and it has been used to describe other Old World regions by analogy.
Explanation:
We have been given a question about the iron age.
We have to explain the iron age.
People throughout much of Celtic Europe lived in hill forts during the Iron Age. Walls and ditches surrounded the forts, and warriors defended hill forts against attacks by rival clans. Inside the hill forts, families lived in simple, round houses made of mud and wood with thatched roofs.
Most people were farmers, and their lives revolved around the farming seasons. Societies consisted of villages where communities of families worked the land and made necessities for living by hand.
Archaeologists know that wheat, barley, peas, flax, and beans were grown and that Iron Age people kept cattle, sheep, and pigs. The meat from the animals was preserved (kept for a long time) using salt, which dried it out.
Final Answer:
The final answer is the "Iron Age" begins locally when the production of iron or steel has advanced to the point where iron tools and weapons replace their bronze equivalents in common use.
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