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Using weapons
in the backyard of mr stephenson.
Men, Math, and Mr. Usso.
Soft foods such as eggs, insects, worms, and berries
he taught the colonial people how to farm using the land and how to hunt and make weapons
According to anthropology, Australopithecus Afarensis did have opposable thumbs. This construct, it is thought, gave it the ability to form tools and hunt for food more efficiently.
They used they're weapons to hunt animals, they would sometimes throw they're weapons at the animals. For example, they would throw it at the buffalo. Mostly they would hunt using a rifal, a spear, etc.
Australopithecus Afarensis were gatherers because they didn't have any tools to hunt, they just had arms to grab objects like children or food.
Because they had to hunt for food and heaps got killed hunting then the others starved.
It is likely that Australopithecus hunted in groups as they were social animals with similar behaviors to modern primates, who often hunt cooperatively. Their anatomy and tool use suggest they may have utilized group hunting strategies to capture prey. However, the exact hunting behaviors of Australopithecus are still debated among scientists.
They had knives, guns, and armor to protect themselves from the animals they hunt and to use these weapons to hunt for food.
Australopithecus used tools to help them evolve by the later people using rocks instead of sticks .-Dick face