Plastic Age: 1907-present.
Bronze Age.
Things are more modern. War was common, arms, tools and even houses were forged of bronze. People after death went to "Hades", a kind of hell.
The Iron Age lasted roughly from 1500 BCE to 500 BCE. We're used to iron now, but iron-making technology was a major innovation, and it took thousands of years for people to figure it out.
The Metal Age is divided into three stages: the Copper Age, the Bronze Age and the Iron Age. During the Metal Ages, people made a variety of metal objects. They also invented new techniques for making clay pottery. The most characteristic examples are beaker pots.
The Roman period is preceded by the Iron Age, and followed by the Early Medieval period.
It is generally categorized in three archaeological periods: the Stone Age, Bronze Age and Iron Age.
Steel Age: 1800s-present.
The Iron Age ended when human culture advanced to new levels. In some instances, the iron age ended when a civilisation still in its wake was conquered by a superior civilisation. For example the Iron Age in ancient Britain came to an end when its southern half was conquered by the Roman Empire.
The five ages of man is a Greek creation story that traces the lineage of mankind through five successive "ages" or "races" including the Golden Age, the Silver Age, the Bronze Age, the Age of Heroes, and the present (to Hesiod) Iron Age.
Scientists suggest the plastic layers could be used to mark the start of the Anthropocene, the proposed geological epoch in which human activities have come to dominate the planet. They say after the bronze and iron ages, the current period may become known as the plastic age.
It's a new geologic age some scientists have proposed to mark the near-universal spread of plastic around Earth. Since the 1950s, researchers say, we've been living in the Age of Plastics. You may have heard of another relatively new time period—the Anthropocene, or Epoch of Humans.
The last geologic epoch, the Holocene, is thought to encompass both the Bronze and Iron Ages. But we do not yet have a tool or material to define our current age.
The Iron Age Celts lived in Britain before and after Jesus. We're going back a very, very long time - two thousand years ago, in fact. Our years are numbered by starting at the year Jesus Christ was born - and the Iron Age Celts lived here 750 years before that.
If the evidence bears out, it would also mean that humans came to North America a whole lot earlier than previously believed: 10,000 years earlier. Humans were living in the Siberian Arctic prior to the last glacial maximum, when the climate was milder and hunting options were abundant.
The Stone Age marks a period of prehistory in which humans used primitive stone tools. Lasting roughly 2.5 million years, the Stone Age ended around 5,000 years ago when humans in the Near East began working with metal and making tools and weapons from bronze.
AGES OF HISTORY
History is divided into five different ages: Prehistory, Ancient History, the Middle Ages, the Modern Age and the Contemporary Age.
Languages mentioned include Aquitanian, Basque, Celtiberian, Etruscan, Finnish, Hungarian, Iberian, Lepontic, Lusitanian, Pictish, Raetic, 'Tartessian', Thracian and the Ladin dialect of the Italian Alps.
An important part has also been played, however, by the analysis of Iron Age human remains, which has revealed strikingly high levels of interpersonal violence, including evidence for repeated episodes of trauma throughout the lives of certain individuals.
The Stone Age, Bronze Age, and Iron Ages are three major periods in history. They are separated by the changes that took place in human society, from hunter-gatherers to farmers, and then to city dwellers.
Prehistory is split into three main categories, based on developing technologies and the materials they used: Stone, Bronze and Iron. The Stone Age is split into three separate periods: Palaeolithic, Mesolithic and Neolithic. WHAT IS PREHISTORY?
The age before the Stone Age was called the Ice age. During this period, thick ice sheets covered vast areas of land.
Roughly 10,000 years ago, Earth was experiencing a time of critical change. The planet was leaving the Ice Age, near the end of a much larger pattern of warming and cooling climate events. This led to major changes in the environments people were living in.
The Chalcolithic or Copper Age is the transitional period between the Neolithic and the Bronze Age. It is taken to begin around the mid-5th millennium BC, and ends with the beginning of the Bronze Age proper, in the late 4th to 3rd millennium BC, depending on the region.
The first humans emerged in Africa around two million years ago, long before the modern humans known as Homo sapiens appeared on the same continent. There's a lot anthropologists still don't know about how different groups of humans interacted and mated with each other over this long stretch of prehistory.