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Stone Tools Matching Pairs Game

Can you find the matching pairs? When you do, you will learn more about what is shown in the photograph.

– P means that the tool is Palaeolithic (Old Stone Age)
– M means that the tool is Mesolithic (Middle Stone Age)
– N means that the tool is Neolithic (New Stone Age)

Old Stone Age (Palaeolithic) Climate Change

During part of the Old Stone Age (Palaeolithic) there was an Ice Age. This meant that 500,000 (half a million) years ago Britain was covered by a massive sheet of ice! As this Ice Age ended the temperature increased and the ice melted, as part of natural climate changes.

By the end of the Old Stone Age (Palaeolithic) all the land under the ice was available once again for people to live in. The there was no Britain though – as we were still joined to the rest of Europe! You could literally walk from what is now Britain to France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Germany, Denmark or Norway!

Here the sea is shown in blue, the ice in white and the land in green.

Middle Stone Age (Mesolithic) Climate Change

Doggerland is the name archaeologists have given to an area of land between Britain, the Netherlands, Germany and Denmark which is now under the North Sea.

At the start of the Mesolithic, around 11,000 years ago, Doggerland was a very large area and would have been lived in by numerous groups of people.

As a result of climate change and sea level rise from the melting of glaciers after the last ice age Doggerland gradually flooded. It got smaller and smaller until by the middle of the Mesolithic Britain finally became an island, about 8000 years ago.

Until that time Doggerland would have provided a connection between Britain and Europe, people would have traded and exchanged things, and might have spoken a common language.

After Britain became an island, people would have needed boats to travel to the rest of Europe. From this time onwards archaeologists find less evidence for contact with the continent during the rest of the Mesolithic.

By about 6,000 years ago the coast of Britain looked much as we would recognise it today.

Stone Age Tools Hotspots

These are Mesolithic tools that Stone Age people used as everyday items. They would be essential to survival. The Mesolithic era was from approximately 11,000 BC to 6,000 BC.

If you click on the hotspots, you can find out more about the different tools. Why not try to guess what each tool is before checking?

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