Homo neanderthalensis is thought to have emerged around 130,000 years ago.
They mostly lived in caves.
Neanderthals never lived in Africa. Only in Europe, Asia and the Middle East.
They lived 140,000 years ago, and they lived in Euorpe. They also lived in groups and hunted in packs. These were the first real humans to live. They could not feel pain though. These people were smart and good but they died out.
It is incorrect to refer to Neanderthals as "Neanderthals' world." Neanderthals were a species of ancient humans that existed in the Paleolithic era, while "Neanderthal" is often used to describe the species as a whole. "Neanderthal" and "Neanderthals' world" would not typically be used interchangeably in a documentary about them.
No, Neanderthals and modern humans shared a common ancestor but evolved separately. Neanderthals are a distinct human species that lived in Europe and Asia before going extinct around 40,000 years ago. Modern humans, Homo sapiens, evolved in Africa and migrated out of the continent, eventually spreading and replacing Neanderthals.
They lived in caves.
By digging in caves where they use to live. The tools and weapons they dig up tells how the Neanderthals lived.
Fully developed Neanderthals lived from 130,000 to 27,000 years ago.
They lived in Europe and Asia.
They lived in caves.
They lived in caves.
They lived in caves.
cold and brutal
It began about 600,000 years ago, when the ancestors of Neanderthals began to evolve into Neanderthals.
No, humans and Neanderthals are not the same species. Neanderthals were a separate species of hominins that lived alongside and interbred with early humans.
They relied on hunting large animals.
They mostly lived in caves.