- Late Paleolithic, from 40th millennium BC
- Aterian tool-making
- Semi-permanent dwellings in Wadi Halfa
- Tools made from animal bones, hematite, and other stones
- Neolithic, from 11th millennium BC
- c. 10,500 BC: Wild grain harvesting along the Nile, grain-grinding culture creates world's earliest stone sickle blades
- c. 8000 BC: Migration of peoples to the Nile, developing a more centralized society and settled agricultural economy
- c. 7500 BC: Importing animals from Asia to Sahara
- c. 7000 BC: Agriculture—animal and cereal—in East Sahara
- c. 7000 BC: in Nabta Playa deep year-round water wells dug, and large organized settlements designed in planned arrangements
- c. 6000 BC: Rudimentary ships (rowed, single-sailed) depicted in Egyptian rock art
- c. 6th millennium BC: common knowledge of animal-skin tanning
- c. 5500 BC: Stone-roofed subterranean chambers and other subterranean complexes in Nabta Playa containing buried sacrificed cattle
- c. 5000 BC: Archaeoastronomical stone megalith in Nabta Playa, world's earliest known astronomy
- c. 5000 BC: Badarian; furniture, tableware, models of rectangular houses, pots, dishes, cups, bowls, vases, figurines, combs
- c. 4400 BC: finely-woven linen फ्राग्मेंट
- Inventing prevalent, from 4th millennium BC
- By 3400 BC, the world's earliest-known:
- c. 4000 BC:
- 4th millennium BC: Gerzean tomb-building, including underground rooms and burial of furniture and amulets
- 4th millennium BC: Cedar imported from Lebanon
- c. 3900 BC: An aridification event in the Sahara leads to human migration to the Nile Valley
- c. 3500 BC: Lapis lazuli imported from Badakshan and / or Mesopotamia
- c. 3300 BC: Double reed instrumentss, lyres
- c. 3500 BC: Senet, world's oldest-(confirmed) board game
- c. 3500 BC: Faience, world's earliest-known glazed ceramic beads
- c. 3200 king menes (mee-neez) banded upper and lower egypt together
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