The invention of the wheel falls into the late neolithic era. From 3500 B.C.E. onward, the wheel has evolutionized into something that is used in almost anything mechanical. The earliest depictions of the wheel were made out of carved stones and wood. It is better that wheels now use rubber which has the ability to stop at a moment's notice and maneuver through different terrains and weather conditions. Even though many may think that wheels were always used for transportation, they were also used for something very different. The first wheels were first used for making pots or pottery sculpting. The wheel was even used to torture people by attaching them to a wheel by tying their limbs, spinning them to death by making all of their blood rush to their head, like attaching a person to a Spin-The-Wheel board game. In China, the wheel was used for transportation with the chariot in 1200 B.C.E. In 400 B.C.E., Nubians also used wheels for pottery and the invention of the water wheel. Another interesting fact is that on television, all wheels rotate backwards from the way they do in real life. Also, North America had the first use of the wheel inside of toys. In fact, astonishingly, the wheel was not used for moving people around until almost three centuries later. The wheel has served and still serves many purposes, and one we definitely could not live comfortably without. (Ancient