The story of India begins almost 500,000 years ago, when man first appeared on the subcontinent. Stone Age man occupied almost the entire Indian subcontinent except the Gangetic plain and some parts of Kerala. He shared his habitat with ancestors of cattle, buffalo, elephant, horse, hippopotamus and rhinoceros amongst others. The early man took shelter in natural caves and rock shelters but led a nomadic life of hunter-gatherer like his other counterparts in world. He ate meat, wild fruits, edible roots and tubers. These activities were carried out with the help of a variety of stone tools like hand axes, cleavers and scrapers. His life of hunter-gatherer did not change for thousands of years.
During all these millennia man was refining the tool technique and had started making smaller but more effective tools of stone as well as bone. He had also started expressing his ideas through rock paintings by this time. Around 9000 BCE the climate became more congenial and man started occupying new areas. He began to settle down in some parts of Vindhyas and the Gangetic valley. By this time fire was discovered and bow & arrow had been invented. Although still a hunter-gatherer, man stayed in seasonal camps and made stone or clay floors with hearths for living; and learnt to make pottery. He ate meat of animals like wild cattle, deer, nilgai, rhino and boar along with birds, fish, fruits, roots, tubers and wild rice. Rice was pounded, and perhaps cooked, before eating. Along with all these developments, one more step towards the consolidation of social group was taken; man started burying his dead, within the settlement area.



