94 



SOCIAL EVOLUTION 



make this very iiniHn'tant stop in progress. Fire was 

 generally known and could be artificially kindled. The 

 food, which had been mainly nncooked vegetable and the 

 raw flesh of fish and animal in the paleolithic culture, 

 was in this new period largely cooked and obtained bv 



From F..rrer, " Urgeschielile des Europiieis.' ' 



Figure 43. Neolitliic Pottery. 



stock breeding and tillage as well as by fishing and the 

 chase. This was a most important gain, for it meant 

 a larger and more certain food supply. And the food 

 supplj^ is always a serious problem among primitive 

 peoples. The men of the polished stone age made im- 

 plements of diverse type, not rough and irregular like 

 their predecessors, but ground smooth and shapely."** 

 They were also skilled in spinning and weaving and had 

 considerable success in making pottery.*^ All these arts 

 were foreign to the men of the rough stone ages. Neo- 

 lithic men left imposing monuments in the form of gi- 

 gantic upright stones, reminiscent of early religious rites 



44 See figure 42. 45 gee figure 43. 



