Yes
Africa forests transformed into grassland and homo eructus were in search of food and water
White people are still migrating to the US. It began roughly in the late 1600's.
Africa is where man began.
Colonized people in Africa and Asia began to launch independence movements.
People in the Stone Age began to migrate in search of food, water, shelter, and resources necessary for survival. They also migrated to adapt to changing environmental conditions and to follow animal herds for hunting purposes.
Human life started in West Africa. Over many years, people began to migrate to follow the animals they hunted (living a "hunter-gatherer lifestyle"), leading them to emigrate throughout the world. Mutations occurred over the centuries as people developed to different environments, giving us our different races.
Homo erectus may have migrated to Africa in search of new resources, better hunting grounds, or to escape environmental changes in their previous habitat. This migration may have also been influenced by population pressures, competition with other species, or the desire to explore new areas.
Africa
The theory that mankind began in Africa and eventually migrated around the world.
From the very moment man began he had to hunt to eat. The first people were hunters and gatherers for food. Archeological evidence points that man began in Africa and eventually spread out.
Because America started on the East coast. People were running out of room due to the large population and so they began to move inland, which happened to be West.
Writing began with pictographs in caves in began in Africa.