Duōmachāha: Difference between revisions

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===== Neolithic =====
===== Neolithic =====
The Neolithic age is defined development of agricultural societies along the various rivers of Duōmachāha and the surrounding region. The Nongkun Civilization traces its history back the furthest, with rice cultivation dating back to 10,000 BCE, though other agricultural societies existed on the R'ngsha (ར་ང་ཚ) River, Skyigichu River
The Neolithic age is defined development of agricultural societies along the various rivers of Duōmachāha and the surrounding region. The Nongkun Civilization traces its history back the furthest, with rice cultivation dating back to 10,000 BCE, though other agricultural societies existed on the R'ngsha (<big><big>ར་ང་ཚ</big></big>), Skyigichu (<big><big>སྐྱེ་ཆུ</big></big>), Kanabyang (<big><big>ཀན་བྱང</big></big>), and Kanalho rivers (<big><big>ཀན་ལྷཽ</big></big>), with various different crops of choice. Unlike other parts of Alshar, Duōmachāha's proximity to Audonia brought about other crops such as wheat, oranges, blackberry, and pomegranate, though rice remained preferred as more could be produced. The different agricultural societies formed different cultures, with the differing landscapes creating three distinct societies into the late Neolithic Era. The Kana culture, Sky Culture, and Nongkun Culture. Each of these cultures grew comfortable in their harvests and began burgeoning civilizations with room for more specialization. While southern Duōmachāha attained agricultural know-how, the north of the country remained dominated by hunter societies into the early Bronze Age. These hunter societies remained numerous, and more closely resembled tribes than settlements, and relied on domesticating animals of the plateau rather than settling in one place. Horses, cows, and goats were domesticated some time around 3000 BCE, and would travel alongside Duōma tribes or be tamed as needed.  Evidence of conflict between the agricultural societies and hunting tribes is limited, but conflict documented by later scholars and following famine suggests technological innovation brought about such.


=== Era of Legend ''(Antiquity)'' ===
=== Era of Legend ''(Antiquity)'' ===
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