they lived where the food lived
During the last glaciation the most northerly people in Europe lived in areas such as Spain and the Black Sea. Other good areas would have been the Middle East, south-East Asia and Africa and also Australia. In the Americas, Central and South America but probably only in the latter part of the glaciation.
I am not sure what you mean by "these people." There were three species of humans that lived during the last Ice Age. First were Homo heidelbergensis, which lived in Africa, Europe, and Asia, but died out long before the end of the Ice Age. They are believed to have evolved into two species, Homo neanderthalis and Homo sapiens. H. neanderthalis lived in Europe and the Middle East, but they died out 20,000 years before the Ice Age ended (that is 30,000 years ago). H. sapiens, the modern humans like you and me, are the only species known to have survived the Ice Age. By the end of the Ice Age, we had already spread to every continent except Antarctica.
igloos.
Cavemen were early humans who lived in prehistoric times, around 2.5 million years ago to about 10,000 years ago. They were known for their use of stone tools, hunting and gathering lifestyle, and basic social structures. They did not have advanced technologies like we do today.
No, the Mesozoic era was dominated by the dinosaurs.
The stoneage.
if you live somewhere REALLY cold you minght find them in the ice! :-)
Yes and no. They did back in the Ice Age, but the GEICO commercials say otherwise.
No, cave men and dinosaurs did not coexist. Dinosaurs went extinct about 65 million years ago, while cave men, or early humans, appeared much later in history, around 2 million years ago. There is no evidence to suggest that they ever lived together.
After the dinosaurs died out.
Yes, cavemen used tools made out of stone, such as flint, obsidian, and granite. These tools were important for activities like hunting, cooking, and building shelters. Stone tools were also used for cutting, scraping, chopping, and more.
They didn't live during the ice age.
Cavemen and the mammoth were on two different evolutionary ladder, therefore, there was not a species that came between them.
no
No.