Possibly. A later activation may mean a delayed menopause, but don't count on it.
why do you want to know so bad????
It did. It started in the fertile crescent an area of land on the Mediterranean east coast, Nile delta and ran back into modern day Iraq. Today the land is no longer very fertile but was highly fertile in 2500BC
Women may start menstruating Seven to nine weeks after caesarean operation.
No but sometimes it can seem that way because they start puberty later then girls.
They start laying eggs when they are about 1 year and 3 months later.
6 weeks
Growing seasons will get longer. They will start earlier and finish later.
The first menstruation can be as young as 9. In the US the average age for girls to start menstruating is 12.
Of course. Girls between the ages 10-15 usually first start menstruating, and many girls that age are virgins.
The average age of menarche (first period) is 13 years old, with anything between 10-16 years old being within normal range. Everyone is different and there are women who start menstruating far earlier or far later.
When a volcano erupts, later it leaves ashes. Those ashes make the ground fertile. So people start growing vegetables on the fertile ground and also start building houses. So they won't have to go back and forward. One house becomes two houses and so on it starts to become a little town. Mean wile the ground is starting to be less fertile. And before you know it little town becomes big city, the ground isn't fertile anymore and people still live there till this day.
Yes, it is possible. Most women ovulate 12 - 14 days after the start of their period, but everyone is different and you can be fertile sooner or later from the average.