Long ago, people didn’t have GPS or paper, so they used clever tricks to remember where things were.
How They Knew Where They Were
Imagine you’re playing hide-and-seek in a big park. You don’t have a phone that tells you exactly where your friend is, instead, you might look for clues like tall trees, the path near the swings, or even the shape of the clouds! People long ago used similar clues to know where they were.
They watched the sun and stars, just like how you might watch the clock to know when it’s time for dinner. They also followed paths made by other people, kind of like how you follow a trail in a forest or a line of footprints in the sand.
How They Wrote Things Down
Without paper, they used things like animal skins, stones, or even their own fingers! It was like writing with chalk on a blackboard, except instead of erasing it, they might carve it into something hard or paint it on a smooth surface.
It’s like when you use your finger to draw shapes in the air, that’s how some people wrote back then. They didn’t have GPS, but they had smart ways to remember and write things down, just like you do every day!
Examples
- A sailor uses the North Star to find his way at sea.
- A traveler follows a river to reach a new village.
- A child learns how to read a simple map drawn in the dirt.
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See also
- How Did the First Maps Influence Explorers?
- How Did the Concept of Time Evolve from Ancient Civilizations to Modern Clocks?
- How Did the Ancient Romans Manage Their Empire Without Modern Tech?
- How Did Ancient Empires Decide on Borders?
- What is Dead reckoning?
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