Answer:
Step-by-step explanation:
During the Middle Stone Age, toolkits included points, which could be hafted on to shafts to make spears. When smaller points were eventually made, they could be attached to smaller, sleeker shafts to make darts, arrows, and other projectile weapons. Stone awls, which could have been used to perforate hides, and scrapers that were useful in preparing hide, wood, and other materials, were also typical tools of the Middle Stone Age.
During the Old Stone Age, or Paleolithic period, some of the tools that were used include sharpened sticks, hammer stones, choppers, cleavers, spears, nets, scrapers (rounded and pointed), and harpoons.
During the Late Stone Age, toolkits were very diverse and reflected stronger cultural diversity than in earlier times. The pace of innovations rose. Groups of Homo sapiens experimented with diverse raw materials (bone, ivory, and antler, as well as stone). Some examples of Later Stone Age tools include burins (gravers), bone needles and harpoon points