35. Iron metallurgy- Hittites did not create the technology of iron metallurgy but expanded on the idea of it. Learned that they were able to heat up iron and hammer it into its own shape. Enabled people to create weapons and tools cheaply. 36.
It is quite interesting, because before this discovery, it was thought that the first humans only left Africa 1 million years ago. However, archaeological evidences show that there were already Dmanisi hominids in Dmanisi 1.77 million years ago. It was also thought that the first humans out of Africa were tall, big-brained, and well-developed stone tools. However, the Dmanisi hominids were small, had small brains, and used primitive tools. The Dmanisi also provided paleoanthropologists with a new site to discover.
On the other hand, they could have gained favourable traits, that can be backcrossed to parent species and passed down through evolutionary history. As modern humans moved out of Africa, they had to learn quickly how to adapt to their new environment, and hybridisation with the Neanderthals benefited this as they gained genes from the already adapted species. One of the benefitting genes we gained from the hybridisation is immune genes which have been found to be from the Neanderthals and Denisovans. The hybrid offspring were better at fighting off certain diseases and this useful trait was passed on. To conclude hybridisation played a role in shaping the evolutionary history of modern humans but only to an extent.
Technology was in the sense of equipment and tools brought over on boats by the explorers. It dependent on the origin of the explorer on what equipment was brought. The plow to help uproot the ground to plant the numerous plants and vegetables brought over. The Native Americans were not civilized as the Europeans and they lacked a lot of tools to mass produce buildings, houses, boats, and farm the lands. Diseases brought from the settlers such as smallpox killed many Native Americans.
Researchers also believed they cared for the sick and elderly, and may have even offered a simplistic kind of dentistry. The Neanderthals appeared to be thriving off the land. The Homo sapiens then appeared, however. Although the groups would co-exist for 11,000 years, the Neanderthals eventually disappeared, and
However, all these inventions came out naturally. Compared to other animals, humans had a larger brain. Therefore, primitive people began to question how to live better, which then resulted in creating the tools. As the author of the text has said, “Isn’t it amazing thought that, one day, a prehistoric man… must have realised that meat from wild animals was easier to chew if it was held over a fire?”
The lower Paleolithic, the middle Paleolithic, and the upper Paleolithic. During this time period, tools were a very essential
At the end Paleolithic Era means Old Stone Age. The first humans didn't have the technology we have today so they use stones and wood to created their first technology
There have been a wide variety of beliefs about where the first settlers of North America came from (Shultz, Mays, & Winfree, 2010). Shultz, himself, is quoted as admitting that “We will probably never know when the first people stepped foot on what we now call the United States”. With that being said, it is widely believed, at this time, that the paleo-Indians were the first people to settle what we now call North America. Early evidence suggested that these people came south out of what is now known of as Alaska around twelve thousand years ago, in an effort to find viable food sources; however, recent carbon dating suggests otherwise. The new theory is that the early settlers might have arrived in North America via boat from either Asia or even Europe as many as fifteen thousand years ago.
They made cooking boxes, canoes, masks for storytelling and totem poles out of cedar wood. Totem poles were carved with a curved knife and were painted with paints made from such items as berries, seashells and charcoal. Paintbrushes were made out of human hair or porcupine hair. Totem poles were used to tell stories or a family’s history since they had no written language. This was the way they were able to record stories and the details of important events that were past down from generation to generation.
With research done to fossils and skeletons of possible primates from the past with comparison to primates of the present shows
Technological advances used to take thousands of years between breakthroughs, but now we have a new advance or discovery almost every day. Around ten million years ago, humans discovered how to make tools. They used stone, wood, antlers, and bones as construction materials. Without those first tools, we probably
They were archaic humans who originated in Africa some 30,000 to 300,000 years ago. Although the Neanderthals originated in Africa, they migrated to Eurasia and lived as far as Great Britain, through some parts of the Middle East, all the way
This research is about the medium changes or ’Global Warming’. Global means the universal and warming means warm up or heating, they two retreats To The observed century-scales rise in the level heat of the ground medium And its related effects, also global warming also returning to any genetic changes in medium. Evidence sees that the medium system is changing; most of the additional energies are stored.
Cooking, it has been around for almost as long as humans. When humans first started roaming the earth we needed to cook to purify our meat and to also add some flavor. Today cooking is a little bit different than back in the stone age. We have mastered various different types of cooking throughout our existence. Cooking used to be essential to human life and to the progression of our livelihood