Paint on cave walls.
Neanderthals were not the first early humans, but they were a distinct human species that lived alongside Homo sapiens. They had a similar level of intelligence and even interbred with early humans. Neanderthals became extinct around 40,000 years ago.
Paint on cave walls.
The branch of early humans that migrated to Europe around 150,000 years ago and were the first to bury their dead were Neanderthals. They used stone tools and displayed burials with grave goods, indicating a symbolic understanding of death. Neanderthals thrived in Europe and parts of Asia before eventually going extinct around 40,000 years ago.
Early humans would have first gone to Europe. Australia is a island and early humans would have probably walked to europe far before they rode the ocean to Australia.
The first remains identified as neanderthals were discovered in the Neander Valley in German.
early humans made tools to help them hunt just like neanderthals and cro magons . the neanderthals had short heavy bodies with thick bones , small chins and heavy browridges .the familys groups lived in caves like the cro magnons . cro magnons was almost the same as todays humans . they made stone carvings and they buried their dead , they were also the first to paint bisons and horses and people carrying spears .
early humans made tools to help them hunt just like neanderthals and cro magons . the neanderthals had short heavy bodies with thick bones , small chins and heavy browridges .the familys groups lived in caves like the cro magnons . cro magnons was almost the same as todays humans . they made stone carvings and they buried their dead , they were also the first to paint bisons and horses and people carrying spears .
Early humans would have first gone to Europe. Australia is a island and early humans would have probably walked to europe far before they rode the ocean to Australia.
Neanderthals first appeared around 400,000 years ago and went extinct around 40,000 years ago. They coexisted and interacted with early modern humans for a significant period of time before eventually dying out.
Yes in a way.They were the first humans to care for each other and have feelings but not on such a level as humans today.
The practice of burying the dead is one that dates back thousands of years and was likely carried out by various ancient human cultures independently. Some of the earliest evidence of deliberate burial comes from sites such as Qafzeh and Skhul in Israel, where Neanderthals and early modern humans were buried around 100,000 years ago.
One of the first controversies surrounding Neanderthals was their classification as a separate species from modern humans. Initially, some scientists argued that Neanderthals were a subspecies or a primitive race within the Homo sapiens lineage. However, subsequent research based on fossils and genetic evidence supported their designation as a distinct species, Homo neanderthalensis.