Homo erectus were animals, just as we are. Animals are the group of organisms descended from the first self-motivating heterotroph multicellular eukaryotic organisms. This includes insects, fish, molluscs, snails, reptiles, birds, and mammals, including modern humans and their primate precursors, such as Homo erectus.
Homo erectus mostly ate animals, wild fruit, and/or plants.
Yes. All animals mate. If Homo erectus didn't mate, there would not have been any members of their species.
homo erectus
Homo erectus and Homo ergaster are two distinct species within the Homo genus. Homo ergaster is considered to be an African species that eventually evolved into Homo erectus, which was more widespread and inhabited both Africa and parts of Asia. Homo ergaster is generally seen as a transitional species between Homo habilis and Homo erectus.
The plural form of Homo habilis is Homo habilis, the plural form of Homo erectus is Homo erectus, and the plural form of Homo sapiens is Homo sapiens.
The cranial breadth of Homo erectus varies between individuals but typically ranges between 130-160mm. This measurement helps in understanding the size and shape of the Homo erectus skull, which is a key aspect in studying human evolution.
Homo erectus and Homo sapiens belong to the kingdom Animalia, which encompasses all animals. They are both classified as primates within the animal kingdom.
Now that is quite tricky, because there wasn't really a species between us and homo erectus-not in ancestral terms, anyway. One species that was our more direct ancestor that lived around the time of erectus would be Homo heidelbergensis, who was the direct ancestor of Homo sapiens and Homo neanderthalensis, better known as the Neanderthal.
The first part of the name homo erectus "homo" identifies the genus.
Homo erectus - album - was created in 1997.
Homo Erectus - film - was created in 2007.
Homo erectus tautavelensis was created in 1971.