Flint weapons found alongside mammoth remains provide crucial insights into early human hunting techniques and social organization. These tools indicate that early humans developed advanced tool-making skills and collaborative hunting strategies, which were essential for survival in harsh environments. The ability to effectively hunt large prey like mammoths suggests cognitive advancements and social structures that facilitated group cooperation, highlighting a significant stage in human evolution. Overall, these artifacts illustrate the interplay between environmental challenges and the development of human ingenuity.
Get out of here! Wooly mammoths were hunted by humans.
Early human,made Weapons from stone thats why its is called Stone Age as you know They sharpened it with other stones and they used it I hope you got what you needed Thanks
Museum of Human Evolution was created in 2010.
It wasn't, the flint is a rock found naturally in the earth. In prehistoric times men chipped flints to make knives because of the sharp edge they aquired, but only before they started working metal.
Mammoths are now extinct, but they were mammals just like we humans (unless you're not a human). They breathed in oxygen through their lungs and give out carbon dioxide.
Biological anthropology is the branch of science that studies human evolution.
Scientists are not sure what caused the extinction of the woolly mammoths, but they have a few theories. These include climate change at the end of the Ice Age, human induced diseases, and human overhunting. It could have also been any combination of the above.
As the world got warmer the woolly mammoth habitat decreased their source of food and as the human population grew the more hunters their was around to hunt the mammoths so that could drove the last of the mammoths to extinction
As the world got warmer the woolly mammoth habitat decreased their source of food and as the human population grew the more hunters their was around to hunt the mammoths so that could drove the last of the mammoths to extinction
Daniel Lieberman has written: 'The evolution of the human head' -- subject(s): Head, Growth, Evolution, Human evolution, Biological Evolution, Growth & development
Yes, climate change and human hunting made them extinct.
simple they deid from the ice age or it could have been from the human race