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  • Imagine you just wake up one day and there's no electricity, no internet, no money, and

  • no work or school.

  • Nothing you're used to!

  • No youre not in California when they shut the power off.

  • You're not even in your own home, because youve magically transported to the Stone

  • Age.

  • What could possibly happen next?

  • Of course, your first reaction would be shock, but we'll move past that.

  • Yes indeed, now you get to experience life Flintstone style.

  • First, let's look around.

  • This is your cave where you live with your family.

  • Wilma’s not there.

  • You have your own sleeping area that’s covered with animal skin.

  • However, you might also live in a primitive hut supported by mammoth tusks and ribs, with

  • an animal skin over it as protection from the rain.

  • Your morning routine won't include a quick trip to the bathroom to brush your teeth and

  • a hot cup of coffee.

  • And if you're wondering where the Stone Age people did their business, don't be surprised

  • to find out it was basically anywhere outdoors.

  • How convenient!

  • So, it’s time to get out and explore the new old world!

  • But, hey, don’t forget to put on your clothes!

  • No, nothing comfy and trendy from the mall.

  • Back in the day, humans used the skins of the animals they hunted to create simple,

  • rough loincloths.

  • To make the skin more flexible, they had to chew it.

  • Let’s hope you already have an outfit for today and won’t have to strain your jaws.

  • Later, they began to smoke the skins to make them last longer, and started making tunics.

  • What about footwear?

  • Scientists believe it appeared about 40,000 years ago.

  • Take a small piece of animalsskin and wrap it around your foot.

  • Then stuff hay under the heel to create some kind of a sole.

  • Voila, one shoe is done!

  • Do the same with the other foot and let’s go!

  • Don’t be scared!

  • You won’t face a giant mammoth right outside the shelter.

  • Ancient humans were pretty smart and learned animalshabits, because it was the only

  • way to survive in the wild.

  • So, they chose caves or built huts in the safest places they could find.

  • Now go down to the river and wash your face.

  • Curious to know what you’d look like in the Stone Age?

  • Peek at your reflection!

  • See, youre not that much different from the modern you.

  • Just your hair is a mess and you might be a few inches smaller with a more developed

  • jaw because of the harsh diet.

  • And look at those bulky muscles!

  • That’s what you get when your life is all about running and fighting with wild animals

  • while hunting.

  • Yes, hunting is on your to-do list today, just wait for it!

  • But now it’s time for breakfast!

  • Luckily, you have some leftovers from dinnereggs, wild fruits, and berries.

  • Sorry, no gas stove to cook the eggs.

  • Wanna try to do it on the fire?

  • Ok, I’ll help youfind two small, but sturdy and dry, wooden sticks and rub them

  • vigorously against each other.

  • Longer, be patient!

  • Oh, finally there’s an ember, good job!

  • Now you can cook your breakfast using a stone as a frying pan.

  • Need a fork?

  • Way too early for that thing.

  • See that seashell attached to a wooden stick?

  • That’s your spoon.

  • Come on, the jungle is waiting for you!

  • Thankfully, the Ice Age is long gone, so the weather is warm, and lush greenery is in abundance.

  • That’s good for you since you have to pick different edible plants, nuts, fruits, and

  • wild grains.

  • It wasn’t until around 10,000 BCE that the Stone Age folks learned how to grow their

  • crops and domesticate animals.

  • And they could finally stop moving from place to place in search of best-hunting grounds.

  • Look, here are some grapes, let’s snatch them!

  • But how do we gather grains?” youre wondering.

  • Well, allow me to introduce you to the Stone Age tools.

  • By the way, the Stone Age got its name thanks to the tools the humans invented that were

  • made ofwoodnah, ha, stone!

  • Let me be your helper againhere’s a U-shaped stone sickle that knocks down the

  • grain stalks.

  • Time to bring everything youve collected to your camp.

  • Now that the shock of time-traveling has worn off, you notice that there are a few other

  • huts near your dwelling.

  • Those are your neighbors.

  • Betty and Barney Rubble.

  • The Stone Age folks usually united in groups of 20-50 and helped each other survive.

  • Ok, you can eat grapes and other fruits raw, but what can you do with the grains?

  • To separate the grains from the husks, take a stone bowl and a small grinding stone and

  • grind the grains.

  • Now, if you mix smashed grains with water, youll get gruel.

  • Fry it on stones the way you did with the eggs, and here’s your first flatbread.

  • Yeah, it doesn’t taste fantastic, but don’t forget were like 15,000 years away from

  • your favorite bakery.

  • Is it dusk already?

  • Brace yourself, my friend, because youre about to go hunting!

  • I have some good news for youyou won’t have to do it alone.

  • The Stone Age people survived because they did almost everything together, so call up

  • your camp neighbors and get ready.

  • How would you feel living in such harsh conditions?

  • Let me know in the comments!

  • Oh, wait, how did humans communicate back then?

  • At the very beginning of the Stone Age, they only used different cries and gestures to

  • express their fear, joy, pain or to alert the others about some danger.

  • Later, they learned how to pronounce sounds using their teeth, tongue, and mouth.

  • That’s how both speech and language appeared, which made their life much easier and leveled

  • up their teamwork.

  • Of course, anthropologists have no clue how exactly their language sounded since no written

  • traces are left.

  • And nobody left a tape.

  • And what’s a tape?

  • More ancient technology

  • So, you and your camp fellows need to take some special hunting tools with you.

  • What are they?

  • The first and most primitive things used for taking animals down were long sharpened wooden

  • sticks, and just a big rock.

  • But over time, prehistoric peeps invented spears.

  • The point wasn’t made of metal, of course (too early for that).

  • Instead, they used small sharp-edged stones attached to a long bone or stick.

  • This was a very important invention since it made hunting less dangerous.

  • Their chances of staying alive were better because they didn’t have to get too close

  • to an animal, and could hunt it from a distance.

  • As dusk settles, your hunting group goes deep into the jungle.

  • You should be looking for large herbivore animals like elephants, woolly mammoths, giant

  • bison, reindeer, and deer.

  • They won't only be your dinner, but will also give you a supply of furs, bones, horns, and

  • skin you can use for your household.

  • There were two main hunting techniques back then.

  • The first was rather time-consuming, but safer.

  • It included digging a huge hole around the place where animals went to drink water.

  • That hole served as a trap for your game.

  • Yes, you gotta dig without a spade.

  • Youll have the help of a digging stick – a wooden stick with a horn at the top.

  • Or a large cleaveran oblong-shaped stone or bone.

  • After the hole is ready, you have to hide and wait patiently.

  • Another technique was all about group chasing the animal and forcing it into the mud and

  • water channels where they had no way to get out.

  • Oh, did you see that?

  • It’s a deer!

  • Run as fast as you can, guys, and try to change its track straight to that swamp.

  • Oh no!

  • It got away.

  • Yeah, not every hunting session was a success.

  • But your tribe still needs something for dinner.

  • Better move on to fishing now!

  • Don’t worry, you won’t have to catch fish with your bare handsfishing nets and

  • harpoons are at your disposal.

  • Nets were made of tree bark and grass.

  • The oldest one found by archeologists dates back to 8300 BCE.

  • Harpoons made of antlers usually had a rope to bring the catch in to the fisher.

  • It was used mostly for big fish like whales, tuna, and swordfish.

  • Ok, throw the net in the river but don’t forget to ask the others where a good spot

  • would be.

  • Now youll have to wait.

  • Oh, look!

  • There’s some fish!

  • Pull the net with all your might!

  • Tribe folks, help him!

  • Me?

  • I’m just directing here.

  • Alright!

  • You won’t be hungry tonight.

  • Bring what you caught to the camp and get some rest; the others will take care of the

  • catch.

  • I know what youre thinking - “It’s all work and no play”.

  • And yes, youre right, the Stone Age life was anything but easy.

  • But still, humans had some kind of entertainment.

  • No, youre not going to an amusement park or a cinema.

  • But you can pass the time playing music on the flutes made from bird bones and mammoth

  • ivory.

  • Some crafting is another option; make necklaces and bracelets from tusks, bones, and shells.

  • Or get full-on artsy and draw patterns on your body using a paint made from ochre (a

  • type of red clay) or carve some pictures in the cave.

  • Carve something crazy to make archeologists wonder, he-he.

  • Can you smell that?

  • It’s dinner!

  • Go enjoy it, you deserved it!

  • That other smell?

  • I already had dinner, can’t you tell?

  • Hey, if you learned something new today, then give the video a like and share it with a

  • friend!

  • And here are some other cool videos I think you'll enjoy.

  • Just click to the left or right, and stay on the Bright Side of life!

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石器時代の一日を生きなければならないとしたら (What If You Had to Live a Day in the Stone Age)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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