After doing some research on this matter the consensus is that they did not use fire. I saw a few threads where people believe they did but that would be near the end of their existence.The timeline is very long for these beings and the evidence is hard to discern.
Some of the earliest people on Earth, the Australopithecus species, were known for being the first people to walk upright. Fossils from this species exist that are millions of years old.
Scratched himself. Invented the jigsaw puzzle. Covered home plate on a bunt.
Omnivore
Australopithecus is the more ape like humans and sediba is for some kind of fountain in Africa
it had wings
they didnt
they didnt
Yeah
Some of the earliest people on Earth, the Australopithecus species, were known for being the first people to walk upright. Fossils from this species exist that are millions of years old.
Well they invented fire, discovered water.
Australopithecus lived around 4 million years ago in Africa, and is known as one of the ancestors of humans. To answer your question, maybe the twig provided the possibility for the discovery of fire? Australopithecus were not known for tool-making, so I would assume that the twig was useful for discovering fire.
Australopithecus usually was quite cowardly, and never killed animals larger than themselves, so they hardly used tools. Fire, well... No, they did not use fire. They built shelters, or took cover in caves to keep warm, out of the rain, and away from predators.
What i swear he got shot coz people didnt like wat he was doing???
Australopithecus used tools to help them evolve by the later people using rocks instead of sticks .-Dick face
before toasters people used to toast bread or bagels over a fire . they didnt have electricity in the olden days. you should know this gosh.
1.learn to spell 2.they probally used a fire 3. or they didnt have toast
Australopithecus is a latin name.Australopithecus literally means "southern ape". "Austral" southern or South from Latin and "pithecus" from "pithēkos" meaning "ape" in greek. The name now applies to many different species besides africanus including Australopithecus anamensis, Australopithecus afarensis, Australopithecus garhi, Australopithecus boisei, Australopithecus robustus and Australopithecus sediba.