Studies can relate early humans that lived many years ago in different ways. They would go by stories, clothes and books.
Early humans lived in groups for protection, hunting, gathering food, and sharing resources. Living in groups increased their chances of survival in a harsh environment. By collaborating and working together, they were able to defend against predators, find food more efficiently, and care for each other.
had more sophisticated tools and art, as well as a more complex social structure than Neanderthals.
Idians
No humans have lived in Antarctica that are native to the continent. It's too cold there to support life.
most early humans lived in africa...and this is one of the many type of early human species that lived in africa.
They lived in caves and rock shelters.
No, cave paintings and evidence of human habitation in caves date back much further than 100 BC. The earliest known cave paintings were created more than 30,000 years ago by early humans. The term "cavemen" generally refers to prehistoric humans who lived in caves, so their existence predates 100 BC by thousands of years.
Cro-Magnon is a term used to refer to modern humans who lived in Europe during the Upper Paleolithic period, around 40,000 to 10,000 years ago. They are known for their advanced tool-making skills and artistic abilities, as demonstrated by the intricate cave paintings found in places like Lascaux in France. Cro-Magnons are considered anatomically and behaviorally similar to modern humans.
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.
Idk about first but... Do humans have thorns sticking out of backs or a hard shell or strong teeth but what do we have? We have cooperation that's how humans survived so long.
The earliest humans evolved in the area in and around Ethiopia in Africa. They spread from there to the Middle East and then into Asia and Europe.
For survival. Alone, they can die easier by predators, so early humans lived as groups, protecting and caring for one another.