Warming a home, cooking food, heating water, generating electricity.
The term that refers to modern humans is Homo sapiens.
Humans have had fire since prehistory... If you mean Indians as in the Native Americans, then yes. If you mean the ancient cultures of the Indus Valley, then yes. Fire was around even in Paleolithic times. Humans have had fire since prehistory... If you mean Indians as in the Native Americans, then yes. If you mean the ancient cultures of the Indus Valley, then yes. Fire was around even in Paleolithic times.
The scientific name for anatomically modern humans is Homo sapiens.
Neanderthals were shorter and stockier than modern humans, with a more robust build and shorter limbs. They also had a larger brain size than modern humans.
Homo sapiens sapiens, which is another term for modern humans, have a range of skills including complex problem solving, communication through language, tool use, social cooperation, and the ability to adapt to a variety of environments. These skills have allowed humans to thrive and dominate the planet.
The use of fire by early humans reminds us that we must be able to adapt to change.
The use of fire by early humans reminds us that we must be able to adapt to change.
The use of fire by early humans reminds us that sometimes they adapted by changing the environment not themselves.
Homo sapiens are modern Humans. When we first evolved, we were unique among other primate in that we had the ability to use language and innovate.
Fire extinguishers!!
What we wear now. THIS - NOW - TODAY is "modern days".
we dont. the first fire has long since burned out.
Fire provided warmth, and made it possible for humans to expand to colder climates. It also allowed humans to cook food, and thus be able to eat a wider variety of foods.
It was given to them by the teachings of the Titan Prometheus.
The early humans discovered and started to use fire some 500,000 years ago. It took hundreds of thousand years to discover how to make fire.
The controlled use of fire by early humans is believed to have begun around 1.5 million years ago in the Paleolithic Age.
The Stone Age is generally considered to be the period between about 450,000 years ago and about 2,300 years ago, when humans first began to work with metals (the Bronze Age). The earliest evidence we have of hominids regularly using fire is from about 1.6 million years ago, although presumably, the migration of hominids from the warmth of the African continent into areas of Asia and Europe necessitated the use of fire for heating. Based on current evidence, anatomically modern humans appear to have been around for only the last 150-200,000 years. Since the ancestors of modern humans regularly used fire for various purposes, there are a couple of answers to your question: 1) Before the stone age 2) It depends on what you mean by "humans"