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Prehistoric India — Stone Age Cultures






📌 Topic 01 of 6 · Chapter 02 · Prehistoric India & IVC

Prehistoric India — Stone Age Cultures

Palaeolithic, Mesolithic, Neolithic, Chalcolithic ages — tools, sites, lifestyle, and transition to settled life.

📖 Prehistoric India — Overview

Prehistoric India refers to the period before written records — roughly from 2 million years ago to about 2500 BCE. This period is divided into Stone Age (Palaeolithic, Mesolithic, Neolithic) and Metal Age (Chalcolithic, Bronze Age, Iron Age).

⭐ Key Fact: The term “prehistoric” does not mean unimportant — it means the period before written records. We know about prehistoric India through archaeological evidence — tools, cave paintings, skeletal remains, and settlement sites.

🪨 1. Palaeolithic Age (Old Stone Age) — 2 million to 10,000 BCE

  • Meaning: “Palaeo” = old, “lithos” = stone — Old Stone Age
  • Tools: Crude, unpolished stone tools — hand axes, cleavers, choppers
  • Lifestyle: Nomadic hunter-gatherers; no agriculture; no pottery; no settled life
  • Fire: Discovered fire — used for warmth and cooking
  • Divisions: Lower Palaeolithic, Middle Palaeolithic, Upper Palaeolithic

Key Palaeolithic Sites in India:

SiteLocationSignificance
BhimbetkaMadhya PradeshCave paintings — oldest rock art in India; UNESCO World Heritage Site
HunsgiKarnatakaLargest concentration of Palaeolithic tools in India
AttirampakkamTamil NaduEvidence of Acheulian tools (~1.5 million years old)
Narmada ValleyMadhya PradeshNarmada Man — oldest human fossil in India
Belan ValleyUttar PradeshEvidence of all three Stone Age phases

🏹 2. Mesolithic Age (Middle Stone Age) — 10,000 to 6,000 BCE

  • Tools: Microliths — tiny, geometric stone tools; used as arrowheads, spear tips
  • Lifestyle: Semi-nomadic; hunting, fishing, gathering; beginning of domestication of animals
  • Climate: End of Ice Age — warmer climate; forests expanded
  • Art: Cave paintings at Bhimbetka show hunting scenes, animals, humans

Key Mesolithic Sites: Bagor (Rajasthan) — largest Mesolithic site; Langhnaj (Gujarat); Adamgarh (MP) — evidence of earliest animal domestication in India.

🌾 3. Neolithic Age (New Stone Age) — 6,000 to 2,500 BCE

  • Tools: Polished stone tools — ground and polished; more efficient
  • Revolution: Neolithic Revolution — transition from food gathering to food production (agriculture)
  • Agriculture: Cultivation of wheat, barley, rice; domestication of cattle, sheep, goats
  • Pottery: Invention of pottery — for storing food and water
  • Settled life: First permanent villages; mud-brick houses
  • Burial: Evidence of burial practices — belief in afterlife

Key Neolithic Sites:

SiteLocationSignificance
MehrgarhBalochistan (Pakistan)Oldest Neolithic site in South Asia (~7000 BCE); precursor to IVC
BurzahomKashmirPit dwellings; evidence of dog burial with humans
ChirandBiharBone tools; evidence of rice cultivation
PiklihalKarnatakaAsh mounds — evidence of cattle herding
HallurKarnatakaEvidence of horse domestication

⚗️ 4. Chalcolithic Age (Copper-Stone Age) — 3,000 to 1,500 BCE

  • Meaning: “Chalco” = copper — first use of metal (copper) alongside stone tools
  • Transition: Bridge between Stone Age and Bronze Age
  • Features: Copper tools, painted pottery, small villages, agriculture
  • Key cultures: Ahar culture (Rajasthan), Kayatha culture (MP), Malwa culture (MP), Jorwe culture (Maharashtra)
📝 Exam Tip — Stone Age Sequence:
Palaeolithic (crude tools, nomadic) → Mesolithic (microliths, semi-nomadic) → Neolithic (polished tools, agriculture, settled) → Chalcolithic (copper + stone, painted pottery)
Remember: Bhimbetka = cave paintings; Mehrgarh = oldest Neolithic site; Bagor = largest Mesolithic site