Predicting the future of humanity a million years from now involves significant uncertainty. While humans have shown remarkable adaptability and resilience, numerous factors, including climate change, technological advancements, and potential global catastrophes, could impact our survival. Evolution may lead to changes in our species, and it's possible that future humans could be quite different from those today. Ultimately, while it's plausible that humans or their descendants may still exist, the form and nature of humanity could be drastically altered.
It is now known what North America look like 100 million years from now.
Dinosaurs became extinct at the end of the Cretaceous period that is almost 65 million years ago. Genus Homo evolved about 2.5 million years ago. On the other hand, we've changed the name of dinosaurs over the years; now they are called birds.
It is really expensive to clone a human. It can cost anywhere from $1.7 million to $2.0 million. Cloning is not available to the public as of now. Wait a few years and you never know.
-Greece was 10 million 100 years ago , now 10 million again -Turkey was 10 million 100 years ago (Antolia and istanbul not ottoman empire) now 78 million
The Archelon lived about 75 to 65 million years ago in a shallow sea that covered what is now the central US and Canada. Because it died out around 65 million years ago, there were no humans around to try to prevent its extinction.
The air 1 million years ago was pretty much the same as it is now.
No. Despite countless dramatic misrepresentations, all the dinosaurs were long gone by the time anything like humans appeared. Timewise, the dinosaurs perished suddenly at the end of the Cretaceous, some 65 million years ago. Humans, most anthropologists now think, separated from the apes about 4 million years ago, and the "caveman" type (modern-sized braincase) only dates back about half a million years.
Time will tell.
The genus Homo, to which humans (Homo sapiens) belong is estimated to be 2.5 million years old and appeared in the Lower Paleolithic. Among the first examples of this genus wasHomo habilis ("handy man"). This species was preceded bt the australopithecines.
Homo erectus is estimated to have lived around 1.9 million to 143,000 years ago. Their existence spanned for about 1.75 million years, making them one of the longest-lived species of early humans.
No, humans are currently classified as Homo sapiens, the only remaining species in the Homo genus. Homo erectus was an extinct species of early human that lived approximately 1.9 million to 143,000 years ago.
Humans have been living in what is now Spain since at least 1.2 million years ago. As such, it isn't said to have been discovered the way, for example, the New World was discovered.