The fossils of the early humans have not found in India. A hints
of the earliest humans presence in India
is indicated by stone tools of about 25,000
BC, obtained from deposits.
From their first appearance to around 3000 BC humans used
only stone tools for different purposes. This periods are known as Stone age, which has
been divided into Paleolithic (early or old stone) age, Mesolithic age( middle
stone ), Neolithic age( new stone ).
1. Palaeolithic or Old Stone
Age
(2,000,000 – 10,000 BCE)
2. Mesolithic or Middle Stone Age (10,000 – 5,500 BCE)
3. Neolithic or New Stone Age (5,500 – 2,500 BCE
2. Mesolithic or Middle Stone Age (10,000 – 5,500 BCE)
3. Neolithic or New Stone Age (5,500 – 2,500 BCE
The Palaeolithic Age in India
The
word Palaeolithic derives from the Greek – palaios (old)
and lithikos (is relating to or composed of stone), which
means ‘old age of the stone’ or ‘Old Stone Age’
The
Palaeolithic Age in India is divided into three phases in accordance with the
type of stone tools used by the people and also according to the nature of
climatic change.
The first phase is called Early or Lower Palaeolithic, the
second Middle Palaeolithic, and the third Upper Palaeolithic.Until further and
adequate information is available about the Bori artefacts,
the first phase may be
placed broadly between 600,000 and 150,000 BC, the second between 150,000 and
35,000 BC, and the third between 35,000 and 10,000 BC.
However, between 35,000 and 1500 BC, tools relating to both
Middle and Upper Palaeolithic ages have been found in the Deccan Plateau.
The Lower Palaeolithic or the Early Old Stone Age covers the
greater part of the ice age. The Early Old Stone Age may have begun in Africa
around two million years ago, but in India it is not older than 600,000 years.
This date is given to Bori in Maharashtra, and this site is considered to be
the earliest Lower Palaeolithic site. People use hand axes, cleavers, and
choppers. The axes found in India are more or less similar to those of western
Asia, Europe, and Africa. Stone tools were used largely for chopping, digging,
and skinning.
Early Old Stone Age sites have been found in the valley of river
Son or Sohan in Punjab, now in Pakistan. Several sites have been found in
Kashmir and the Thar desert. Lower Palaeolithic tools have also been found in
the Belan valley in UP and in the desert area of Didwana in Rajasthan. Didwana
yielded not only Lower Palaeolithic stone tools but also those of the Middle
and Upper Palaeolithic ages. Chirki-Nevasa in Maharashtra has yielded as many
as 2000 tools, and those have also been found at several places in the south.
Nagarjunakonda in Andhra Pradesh is an important site, and the
caves and rock shelters of Bhimbetka near Bhopal also show features of the
Lower Palaeolithic age. The rock shelters may have served as seasonal camps for
human beings. Hand axes have been found in a deposit of the time of the second
Himalayan inter-glaciation, when the climate became less humid. The people of
the Lower Stone Age seem to have principally been food gatherers. They took to
small game hunting and lived also on fish and birds. The Early or Lower Stone
Age in India may be associated with the people of the Homo sapiens group.
The
Middle Palaeolithic industries were largely based upon flakes or small pieces
of stone which have been found in different parts of India with regional
variations. The principal tools comprise blades, points, borers, and scrapers,
all made of flakes.
Comments
Post a Comment