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During prehistoric times there was a succession of cultures that flourished in the land of present-day Moldova from the end of the Ice age up through the Neolithic Age, the Copper Age, the Bronze Age, and the beginning of the Iron Age, when historical records begin to be made about the people who lived in these lands.
These cultures included the Linear Pottery culture ( ca.
5500 – 4500 BC ), the Yamna culture ( ca.
3600 – 2300 BC ), and the Cucuteni-Trypillian culture ( ca.
5500 – 2750 BC ).
During this period of time many innovations and advancements were made, including the practice of agriculture, animal husbandry, kiln-fired pottery, weaving, and the formation of large settlements and towns.
Indeed, during the Cucuteni-Trypillian Culture, some of the settlements in this area were larger than anywhere on Earth at the time, and they predate even the earliest towns of Sumer in the Mesopotamia.
The area, stretching from the Dnieper River in the east to the Iron Gate of the Danube in the west ( which included the land now in Moldova ), had a civilization as highly advanced as anywhere else on Earth during the Neolithic period.

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