Skara Brae is a Neolithic stone village in the Orkney Islands in northern Scotland (see Figure 1). Using radiocarbon dating, Skara Brae is one of the earliest countryside in the UK and has a residence of more than 5000 years. Due to small changes in isolation and landscapes, the village built between 3100 BC and 2500 BC is one of the best preserved villages in northern Europe today. Since Skara Brae is prehistoric, writing has not been developed yet, the evidence discovered on the website is archaeological.
Some of our Neolithic ancestors even passed the Scottish Stone Age Village, Skara Brae, and there is even evidence that each was in a pristine form of a hydraulic toilet in a rush. However, the first flush toilet using a mechanical lever to flush water was invented by a British writer and a poet, Sir John Harrington. Later, the British plumber called Thomas Crapper developed the invention into a more modern toilet. The Industrial Revolution and Urban Development have locked the process of excrement removal into pipelines and processing plants. They handle sewage to a level that can safely return to the world. Waltner-Toews said that this situation worked well in the 19th and 20th centuries, but in reality it did not solve the problem, it expanded to the industrial scale. The processing plant relies on stable water supply that is not universal
Skara Brae is a Neolithic stone village in the Orkney Islands in northern Scotland (see Figure 1). Using radiocarbon dating, Skara Brae is one of the earliest countryside in the UK and has a residence of more than 5000 years. Due to small changes in isolation and landscapes, the village built between 3100 and 2500 BC is one of the best preserved villages in northern Europe today. - During the transition to human agriculture, archaeologists need to explain the tools, cave murals and cemetery ruins, but human achievement is interesting and essential. The social norm adopted at this time has brought social creation that we know today.
The new solution era occurred around 4 or 500 BC. This is what we call now Neolithic Age. An isolated farmer seems natural, but the amazing discovery of Orkneys' Skara Brae and Rinyo proves the stability of rural life. In these two places local stones are widely used to make interior walls, beds, boxes, cabinets, and furnaces. The roof seems to be supported by rich and strong whale bones than trees. To the south, another Neolithic village in Carn Brea in Cornwall proved a lifestyle similar to that enjoyed by Skara Brae. A wonderful role Animal rearing at both places