Relevant Titles
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Early Food Producers and Agricultural Revolution Class 11 MCQs (NCERT)
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Class 11 History Online Test: Early Food Producers & Agricultural Revolution
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NCERT Class 11 History MCQs on Agricultural Revolution with Answers
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CBSE Class 11 History Quiz: Early Food Producers—Solved MCQs
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Class 11 History Practice MCQs: Agricultural Revolution (NCERT Aligned)
Introduction
Master the Early Food Producers and Agricultural Revolution Class 11 MCQs with this NCERT-aligned practice resource. Covering Part A: Early Societies, Theme 1 – From the Beginning of Time, this set helps you understand how communities shifted from hunting-gathering to food production through cultivation and domestication. You’ll revise key ideas such as the Neolithic Revolution, early crop packages (wheat, barley, rice, millets), animal husbandry, surplus and storage, and the rise of sedentary village life. Each multiple-choice question targets core CBSE outcomes—concept recall, interpretation of archaeological evidence (seeds, tools, pottery, faunal remains), and cause-effect reasoning about technology, environment, and society. Clear explanations follow every answer so you can fix mistakes quickly and build confidence before exams. Whether you need a quick self-check or a full practice session, these Class 11 History MCQs provide focused, exam-oriented revision that mirrors classroom requirements. Start practicing now to strengthen fundamentals and score higher in the CBSE board examination.
Sample MCQs with Explanations
Q1. The term Neolithic Revolution best describes the shift from:
A) Bronze casting to iron smelting
B) Hunting-gathering to food production ✅
C) Barter to coinage
D) Nomadism to long-distance trade
Explanation: Farming and animal domestication enabled surplus, storage, and permanent settlements—core to the Agricultural Revolution.
Q2. Early farmers preferred river valleys mainly due to:
A) Better stone for tools
B) Fertile alluvium and reliable water ✅
C) Abundant metals
D) Defensive cliffs
Explanation: Regular water supply and fertile silt increased yields and supported sedentary villages.
Q3. Which artifact most strongly signals cereal harvesting?
A) Microlith bladelets
B) Sickle blades with silica gloss ✅
C) Bone harpoons
D) Copper chisels
Explanation: Repeated cutting of stalks leaves a characteristic polish, indicating systematic reaping.
Q4. Domestication evidence in faunal remains commonly includes:
A) Larger wild horns
B) Reduced horn size and age profiles ✅
C) Absence of cut-marks
D) Only carnivore gnawing
Explanation: Morphology and culling patterns point to human-managed herds.
Q5. In early farming communities, granaries and sealed bins primarily indicate:
A) Ritual spaces
B) Waste disposal
C) Surplus management and storage ✅
D) Metal workshops
Explanation: Storage technology protected harvests from pests and moisture, stabilizing food supply and population growth.
