No, Africa was not the first continent to be inhabited by humans. The earliest evidence of human presence is found in Africa, but humans also migrated to other continents, such as Asia and Europe, over time.
The most likely continent for first occupation by humans is Africa, specifically the northwest corner of the African continent. This is the scientific answer, well supported by fossil evidence. Humans, very much like today's people, seem to have existed there up to 1.5 million years ago. Somewhere around 150,000 years ago they seem to have migrated beyond Africa into the middle east, India, and China. The last continent (not counting Antarctica) to be occupied was South America.
I believe that wars will take place as long as humans inhabit the world.
Rousseau believed that humans are inherently good and that civilization was evil.
Yes, it is scientifically proven that some people have been born with tails. Because many people believe that God "made" us, a little amount of people believe that humans evolved from chimpanzees. I, however, believe both. That God made chimpanzees, and they evolved by having babies with defects and within millions of years the defects became normal for us humans. Yet, some humans are born with defects, and to the chimps, they are normal. Nobody has ever shown proof that we evolved or that we were made by God.
Humans have taken chickens to every continent except I believe Antarctica.
Most scientists believe that humans originated in Africa.
Africa.
Africa.
Africa
They believe that the evidence point to this group of people living in Africa.
Africa. They do not ' believe ' it so much as accept the evidence for it.
Scientists believe early modern humans originated in Africa. This theory is supported by fossil and genetic evidence that suggests humans evolved in Africa before migrating to other continents.
Many believe Africa was the home of the first humans, though it is not something that is known for sure.
The first early humans were discovered in Africa. Hominin fossils and archaeological evidence dating back millions of years have been found across the continent, leading scientists to believe that Africa is the birthplace of modern humans.
Antarctica is considered the last continent to be discovered by humans. The first confirmed sighting of the continent occurred in 1820.
Humans do not inhabit the continent of Antarctica permanently, but there are settlements there where teams of scientists study aspects of the great frozen continent.