Yes they did they happened to be so advanced in language that if you went back in time and talked to an English family you would be pulling your hairs out.Haha
CONFUSING!!
Early humans likely had basic forms of communication such as gestures and vocalizations before developing spoken language. As they evolved, they started speaking and eventually writing, leading to advanced speech capabilities seen in modern humans.
Homo Erectus
Early humans had smaller brains, used primitive tools and lived as hunter-gatherers. They did not have advanced technology or complex societies like we do today. Additionally, early humans may have had different physical characteristics, such as a more robust build and different facial features.
Speech is a natural ability of humans to communicate verbally, developed over thousands of years. It is difficult to attribute its invention to a single individual, as communication through speech likely evolved as early humans interacted with each other and developed language skills.
Early humans developed the ability to craft and use tools, control fire, and communicate using language long before other abilities such as farming, writing, or advanced technology. These early developments allowed humans to better adapt and thrive in various environments.
It is generally believed by anthropologists that Cro-Magnon Man had speech and rudimentary language abilities. The cave-paintings that they made are also believed to be some form of pictorial communication.
The Cro-Magnons were a population of early modern humans that lived in Europe during the Upper Paleolithic period, around 40,000 to 10,000 years ago. They are known for their advanced tools, art, and burial practices, and are considered ancestral to modern humans.
Cro-Magnon were early modern humans, and looked the same as we do. Neanderthals had a larger mass, bigger muscles, an expanded ribcage with bigger lungs, a weak chin and a prominent brow ridge.
Cro-magnons were a specific group of early modern humans, while early hunter-gatherers were a broader category of humans who relied on hunting and gathering for sustenance. Cro-magnons are known for their advanced tool-making skills, art, and cultural practices. They were anatomically similar to modern humans, while early hunter-gatherers encompass a wider range of human ancestors who lived by hunting and gathering.
The early prolonged absence of humans in the Western Hemisphere can be attributed to geographical barriers such as vast oceans that made long-distance travel challenging for ancient civilizations. Additionally, the lack of advanced navigation technology and seafaring skills likely limited early human migrations to the Western Hemisphere.
early humans painted pictures with caves./
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