The New Stone Age in Northern Europe

audiobook

The New Stone Age in Northern Europe

by John M. (John Mason) Tyler

EN·~6 hours

Chapters

Description

This work opens a window onto the distant dawn of civilization in northern Europe, tracing how scattered bands of hunter‑gatherers gradually gave way to settled communities that built the first stone monuments and cultivated the fertile river valleys. Drawing on the latest archaeological finds—shell heaps along the Baltic, early pottery, timber piles on Swiss lakes, and the rising silhouettes of megalithic sites—the author shows how everyday tools, food remains and burial practices reveal the emergence of social organization, trade networks, and early religious ideas.

Beyond cataloguing artifacts, the narrative explores how these early peoples learned to cooperate, adapt to their environment, and lay the foundations for later institutions. By weaving together evidence from bone, grain and ornament, the book invites listeners to imagine the challenges and innovations that shaped a world on the brink of recorded history, while encouraging curious minds to pursue the mysteries that still lie beneath the ancient soils.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~6 hours (382K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2012-12-18

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

JM

John M. (John Mason) Tyler

1851–1929

A longtime Amherst College biologist, he wrote popular books that tried to bring evolution, education, and religion into the same conversation. His work reflects a moment when science was being explained to broad readers in clear, ambitious terms.

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