Only in Africa In Kenya and in Ethiopia
Early humans likely migrated from Africa to other continents in search of food, resources, and better living conditions. Changes in climate, competition for resources, and the desire to explore new territories may have also played a role in their migration.
Scientists believe early modern humans originated in Africa. This theory is supported by fossil and genetic evidence that suggests humans evolved in Africa before migrating to other continents.
Early humans walked and migrated from the connecting continents of Africa, Asia, and Europe. When land bridges formed during the Ice Age, humans then walked across them to the continents of Australia and North America (then spreading to South America from here). Humans also used boats to transport between Asia and Australia, and may have even used them from Asia to North America.
Continents are the huge land-masses that humans and land animals live on. Some of the continents are connected but for the most part they are separated and very diverse.There are 7 continents:North AmericaSouth AmericaEuropeAfricaAsiaAustraliaAntarctica.
All continents but Antarctica are populated by humans.
Answer: Slavs live on the European and Asian continents.
Angelfish live in almost all the continents.
The Bering land bridge connected Asia and North America. It is believed to have served as a migration route for early humans and animals between the two continents.
Humans reached all the continents in the 19th century, when they began to make tentative visits to Antarctica.
Early humans originated in Africa. Evidence from fossil records and genetic studies indicates that modern Homo sapiens first appeared in East Africa around 200,000 to 300,000 years ago. From Africa, early humans migrated to other continents, eventually populating the globe.
Ice ages do not "allow" any continents to migrate. Plate Tectonics is the process that moves the continents around.