Respuesta :

It is different because if you have a nomadic life you have to find your food and follow it as it moves due to weather changing. As a nomad, you mostly eat meat and not many plants and move around a lot. As a settled village you barely move and farmers plant their own food and can stock up on food. As a settled village you mostly eat plants like grain, wheat, bread, etc. 

Explanation:  The settled village began to develop when people started organizing farms, providing themselves with everything they needed to live. In this way, people began to abandon the nomadic lifestyle that entailed constant, periodic moving from place to place depending on the weather in search of food.

Differences began to emerge and notice between the two lifestyles when settlements were formed, because more people lived in the settlements than in the nomadic groups. The reason for this is greater food security since people started farming. This again meant greater convergence of people towards settlements. Nomadic groups were not always sure that some wild vegetables would be found or the catch would be abundant. In populated villages, everyone would have a job and know what they were doing, a characteristic of early traditional economies. However, not everyone was skillful in farming in the same way, so some would earn more yields than those less skilled, they could exchange excess yields for other essentials and thus become richer than others. Thus, a richer class of people began to stand out, which was not the case in nomadic groups.

Also with the increase in agricultural production, new ideas were constantly coming up on how to improve tools and achieve higher yields, so the technology of land cultivation and domestic animal breeding was advancing, which was also not the case with the nomadic way of life.

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