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ILovePuppiesLol (ilovepuppieslol):

Which sequence best describes the order of migrations of Homo sapiens from the Middle East after emerging from Africa? Europe, North Asia, Australia, the Americas North Asia, Australia, Europe, the Americas Europe, Australia, the Americas, East Asian islands South Asia, Southeast Asia, Australia, East Asian islands

ILovePuppiesLol (ilovepuppieslol):

@ShadowLegendX @Whitemonsterbunny17 @.Sam.

ILovePuppiesLol (ilovepuppieslol):

somebody help me

ILovePuppiesLol (ilovepuppieslol):

so ur saying its B @.Sam.

sam (.sam.):

Some said "Europe, Australia, the Americas, East Asian islands" I'm not sure

sam (.sam.):

That image is from Wikipedia

ILovePuppiesLol (ilovepuppieslol):

use the link, that is the one we were supposed to use

sam (.sam.):

It doesn't tell you exactly the sequence of migration of Homo sapiens though "Evidence indicates that Homo sapiens first appeared in eastern Africa about a hundred thousand years ago. (Members of this species rapidly spread over Africa and all the temperate regions of Europe and Asia), competing with and displacing the groups of Homo erectus that had preceded them. They may even have driven their less clever rivals to extinction—along with several species of large game animals such as the woolly rhinoceros and woolly mammoth. With the tools and intelligence to deal with more challenging external circumstances, (groups of Homo sapiens began to spread into the colder northern reaches of Europe and Asia in search of game.) They dealt with the severe weather by developing warmer insulative clothing, building more sophisticated forms of shelter, and maintaining fires constantly through the winters"

ILovePuppiesLol (ilovepuppieslol):

its definitely A or B

ILovePuppiesLol (ilovepuppieslol):

I'm putting A yolo

sam (.sam.):

Wait it's B, look further down there are timelines for the migration The first hominids to leave Africa for the Middle East were Homo erectus, about 750,000 years ago. Following the temperate and tropical climatic zones, they began to spread eastward. Anthropologists have identified hominid remains dating from about 600,000 years ago in China and about 350,000 years ago in the islands of Southeast Asia. Scientists have dubbed these hominid subspecies “Peking man” and “Java man,” after the locales in which evidence of them first surfaced. The practice of naming subspecies of hominids after the location of first discovery has become an anthropological tradition. Once Homo sapiens began to outwit and replace Homo erectus, the hominid population spread farther northward and southward to colder regions. Two wellknown major subspecies of Homo sapiens were “Neanderthal man” and “Cro-Magnon man,” named after the regions of Germany and France, respectively, where scientists first uncovered their remains. Today’s stereotypical “caveman,” with low forehead and protruding jaw, derives from what scientists have deduced about Neanderthals. Cro-Magnons, with higher foreheads and more regular profiles, looked more like modern human beings. Braving less-temperate climates, the earliest Homo sapiens arrived in the British Isles about 250,000 years ago and in Australia about 60,000 years ago. A later wave of migration to Australia about 40,000 years ago merged with the earlier arrivals to form the aboriginal culture of that continent. The time of arrival in the New World is less certain; evidence is hard to find due to the Pleistocene glaciers that

ILovePuppiesLol (ilovepuppieslol):

fml i was wrong it was c

ILovePuppiesLol (ilovepuppieslol):

HOW IS IT C

sam (.sam.):

Damn

ILovePuppiesLol (ilovepuppieslol):

OMG I GOT THE EARLIER ONE WRONG TOO

ILovePuppiesLol (ilovepuppieslol):

60 PERCENT

ILovePuppiesLol (ilovepuppieslol):

I'm done see you later bye bye, thanks for helping anyways

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