Yes, they would have to or they would all be 1 year or less old. However, they will not survive deep cold which is why they only thrive in the deep south. There is a place where a small colony has been nurtured in the San Louis Valley in Colorado. The alligator's northern most home is here in North Carolina, and they den up in cold weather as their metabolism slows down. They emerge in spring here, when temps hit the mid sixties.
They didn't live during the ice age.
Humans.
Idians
to wherever food was available
To wherever food was available.
during the ice age
igloos
Cro-magnon or homo sapiens sapiens. By the end of the last ice age, we had evolved (as best we can tell) into the form we currently have.
Yes, they live during the last few glaciations in warmer areas where there were trees.
During the ice age, humans adapted by developing specialized tools for hunting and gathering in cold environments. The harsh conditions of the ice age also likely influenced the migration patterns of early humans as they followed food sources and sought warmer climates. Some evidence suggests that periods of extreme cold during the ice age may have led to population declines and challenges in finding food.
there were no humans in the ice ageNonsense, stone age modern humans lived on all the continents except antarctica and south America in the last ice age. It is hard to be certain of average height, that varies both with inheritance and diet.
Cannot be determined as there were no written records, however there may have been thousands of rulers of different groups of modern stone age humans, as humans lived on all continents except antarctica and south america during the last ice age.