History: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
|||
Line 8: | Line 8: | ||
== Pre-Calidus == | == Pre-Calidus == | ||
The Pre-Calidus Era lasted around four thousand years, beginning the centuries around | The Pre-Calidus Era lasted around four thousand years, beginning the centuries around 16,000 years ago. An era where the climate around [[Gotha]] experienced little climatic variability due to lower Tyreal cycle celestial interactions. The climate around gotha, despite being cooler than today's, was hospitable to the development of culture, and most of Gotha hosted biomes with bountiful resources for hominid cultures. | ||
Most cultures moved away from rough, uncrafted stone tools and sticks to highly ingenious chipped and sanded stoned tools, utilising polishing techniques and plant resins to create composite materials and artefacts such as stone-tipped spears and arrows. The advent of twine, rope and weaving led to more dynamic cultures and tools that enabled a much greater number of hominids to survive. | Most cultures moved away from rough, uncrafted stone tools and sticks to highly ingenious chipped and sanded stoned tools, utilising polishing techniques and plant resins to create composite materials and artefacts such as stone-tipped spears and arrows. The advent of twine, rope and weaving led to more dynamic cultures and tools that enabled a much greater number of hominids to survive. |
Revision as of 00:50, 10 November 2024
Hominid Origins
Early Hominid Migration
Tepidus and Dual Shocks Era
Distal Ice age late migratory period
Pre-Calidus
The Pre-Calidus Era lasted around four thousand years, beginning the centuries around 16,000 years ago. An era where the climate around Gotha experienced little climatic variability due to lower Tyreal cycle celestial interactions. The climate around gotha, despite being cooler than today's, was hospitable to the development of culture, and most of Gotha hosted biomes with bountiful resources for hominid cultures.
Most cultures moved away from rough, uncrafted stone tools and sticks to highly ingenious chipped and sanded stoned tools, utilising polishing techniques and plant resins to create composite materials and artefacts such as stone-tipped spears and arrows. The advent of twine, rope and weaving led to more dynamic cultures and tools that enabled a much greater number of hominids to survive.
Art and tools flourished. Sun-dried pottery, cave paintings, stone and wood carvings displaying a large and wide range of motifs were created across the globe. Art that depicts increasingly complex cultures and belief systems such as mythologies and creation myths, culture preserved through oral tradition and other performance arts as writing had yet to be developed.
Some mysterious possible constructs and possible artefacts from this era point to maybe civilisation dating to this era. But to date, most of these signs lack definitive evidence to suggest with certainty the existence of long-lost civilisations.
Primordial Civilization Era
Classical Era Ancient
- Huilcasonco (6492-7413 RH)
- Ilhuiyoco (7538-7465 RH)