In the mesolithic age, the main coloured uses were
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In the mesolithic age, the main coloured uses were
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Answer:
Rock paintings, or rock art, are one of the most common types of art in the Mesolithic Age. But unlike the cave paintings of the Paleolithic Age, Mesolithic rock paintings depicted a wide variety of events from hunting to farming to dancing. Since Mesolithic people no longer had to live in caves to keep warm since the Ice Age ended, they painted on outdoor rocks instead.
Most Mesolithic paintings are red and black since the artists used charcoal and ochre, a reddish clay-like substance, mixed with spit or animal fat to paint with. Some paintings seem to depict ritualistic dances like the scene in the Spanish rock shelter Roca dels Moros. Another painting found in Spain in the Cuevas de la Araña shows a man climbing vines to get honey while bees are swarming around him. If you are thinking about Winnie the Pooh, the image does not look that much different! Unlike the Paleolithic Age, humans in rock paintings look a bit more like humans than they do stick figures.
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