answersLogoWhite

0

there were no humans in the ice age

Nonsense, stone age modern humans lived on all the continents except Antarctica and south America in the last ice age. It is hard to be certain of average height, that varies both with inheritance and diet.

User Avatar

Wiki User

13y ago

What else can I help you with?

Continue Learning about Anthropology

Homo sapiens that lived during the ice age was called what?

Cro-magnon or homo sapiens sapiens. By the end of the last ice age, we had evolved (as best we can tell) into the form we currently have.


How did the ice age affect human life?

During the ice age, humans adapted by developing specialized tools for hunting and gathering in cold environments. The harsh conditions of the ice age also likely influenced the migration patterns of early humans as they followed food sources and sought warmer climates. Some evidence suggests that periods of extreme cold during the ice age may have led to population declines and challenges in finding food.


What caused humans to travel from one continent to another during the Ice Age?

During the Ice Age, lower sea levels created land bridges between continents, like the Bering Land Bridge between Asia and North America. This allowed early humans to migrate to new continents in search of food and resources.


How did the last great ice age have an effect on humans settling in the Americas?

During the last great ice age, large ice sheets locked up much of Earth's water, lowering sea levels and creating a land bridge between Asia and North America known as Beringia. This allowed humans to migrate from Asia into North America, eventually leading to the settling of the Americas.


Why do scientists think the ice age encouraged ancestral humans to spread across the earth?

During the ice age, vast ice sheets covered much of the northern hemisphere, leading to lower sea levels and creating land bridges between continents. This provided ancestral humans with new opportunities to migrate and colonize areas that were previously inaccessible. The harsh conditions of the ice age may have also encouraged human populations to adapt, evolve, and develop new survival strategies, ultimately leading to their widespread distribution across the earth.

Related Questions