Wednesday, April 18, 2012

What were the first humans probably like?

from then to now there has probably been a lot of inbreeding so what did the first humans look like.



some diseases and other things in modern humans have probably came out from inbreeding like eye and hair colors so what did the first humans probably look like.



What were the first humans probably like?

Very hairy, walked stooped over, had bad teeth.



Wow, I think I just described my ex-husband.



What were the first humans probably like?

they were probly jewish or black or a mexican



What were the first humans probably like?

I BELEIVE the first Humans were Adam and Eve in the BIBLE!!!!!



What were the first humans probably like?

like YOU.



just kidding but they were probably uggllyy



What were the first humans probably like?

they were hairy cave men



What were the first humans probably like?

they looked like monkeypeople. :]



What were the first humans probably like?

it depends on when you think humans appeared. I think it we had a time machine and traveled back 10 million years we would be able to communicate with our ancestors. Although they would look very different.



What were the first humans probably like?

Well the first humans on earth (Adam, Eve, Cain and Abel) were very huge, about 30 meters tall. They were also stronger and more phisically fit than us.



What were the first humans probably like?

The first beings were in Ethiopia where the oldest fossils were found. The first human was an African woman who lived in Ethiopia and had children who spread out to different continents. White people are descended from the albino's who soon intermarried with other albino's in Europe.



What were the first humans probably like?

if you are one who believes in evolution, the first people on earth were probably a form of neanderthal, which basically looked like what you would picture a cave man looking like, with lots of hair, to keep them warm and partly for protection, and their foreheads came out slightly compared to ours that are now flat.



What were the first humans probably like?

the first human beings were very primitive, imagine the crudest person you've ever seen, then imagine them even cruder, if you can.



the first peoples of the world varied, depending on their environment.



In colder weather, im sure you could expect sort of what you imagine to be a mix between a caveman and an advanced ape, hunch-backed and hair, to keep warm. broad and short noses for better breathing, and very thick eyebrows. these people would also tend to be stockier than people of the warmer climates.



people of warmer climates would have stringier hair, and they would be more lean than the people of the cold.



im assuming they all had brown eyes, and somewhere along the bloodline mutations occurred, causing green, blue, and even pink eyes.



they probably had larger, more calloused feet, for rugged climbing, and walking on rocks and dirt. beefy hands with wide fingers, in height, probably not much taller than 5'6".



What were the first humans probably like?

Quite ugly I should think, and a bit smelly too!



I shall set my time machine for the stone age, and nip back and have a look.



I will let you know tomorrow, or will that be today, or yesterday when I get back?



What were the first humans probably like?

The first humans migrated out of Africa after the end of the last great ice age. They looked like modern humans but were probably dark skinned. They moved into Northern Europe and caused the extinction of the Neandrethals. A million years before this, a species of human known as Homo agaster migrated out of Africa and became Homo erectus in Asia and the ancestors of Neandrethals in Northern Europe. An ice age began in Europe and a great drought began in Africa. The survivors of the drought were the first modern humans. It is estimated there are more Orangutans alive today than there were of the first true humans. Because humans evolved from such a tiny gene pool, modern humans are nearly clones, despite our superficial differences.

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