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AMERICAN FIRST INHABITANTS - Coggle Diagram
AMERICAN FIRST INHABITANTS
Remember that human beings fist libed in africa and spread out from here
Palelo india
14.000 and 4.000 years ago
Articularly projectile points and scrapers, are the primary evidence of the earliest human activity in the Americas. Archaeologists and anthropologists use surviving crafted lithic flaked tools to classify cultural periods
hey felled these "megafauna" (named such due to the large size compared to modern beasts) with spears tipped with stone points. These animals included the mastadon, mammoth,
The Bering Strait
Eocene
Eocene Epoch, second of three major worldwide divisions of the Paleogene Period (66 million to 23 million years ago) that began 56 million years ago and ended 33.9 million years ago.
During the Eocene, the vertebrates of North America and Europe were very similar; many genera existed in both regions,
Archaic primate forms from the Paleocene Epoch declined during the Eocene as many of their ecological niches were usurped by the more-efficient rodents
Palaeocene
Palaeocene Epoch, first major worldwide division of rocks and time of the Paleogene Period, spanning the interval between 66 million and 56 million years ago.
The climate of North America during the Paleocene Epoch was characterized by a general warming trend with little or no frost. Seasonal variations probably can best be described as alternations of dry and wet seasons.
Late in the Paleocene, mammalian evolution showed a trend toward larger forms and more varied assemblages.
Is typically defined as the time period that began about 2.6 million years ago and lasted until about 11,700 years ago. The most recent Ice Age occurred then, as glaciers covered huge parts of the planet Earth.
There are several theories about it but most archaeologist agree that they arrived in america by crossing the Bering Strait
Pleistocene
Is typically defined as the time period that began about 2.6 million years ago and lasted until about 11,700 years ago. The most recent Ice Age occurred then, as glaciers covered huge parts of the planet Earth.
2,6 About 11,700 million years ago
Miocene
Miocene Epoch, earliest major worldwide division of the Neogene Period (23 million years to 2.6 million years ago) that extended from 23 million to 5.3 million years ago. It is often divided into the Early Miocene Epoch (23 million to 16 million years ago),
The Miocene followed the Oligocene Epoch of the Paleogene Period and was succeeded by the Pliocene Epoch.
Important Miocene deposits occur in North and South America, southern Europe, India, Mongolia, East Africa, and Pakistan.