![]() | Walking with Cavemen - Part 2 Blood Brothers 1 of 3 2 million years B.C. - East Africa The second episode then leaps forward to a time when Paranthropus boisei, Homo habilis and Homo rudolfensis co-exist. H. habilis is depicted as an intelligent omnivore that is more adaptable than its herbivorous neighbours, being able to eat tall grasses in difficult times. It only briefly shows the H. rudolfensis, remarking that albeit they are taller, they are very similar to the H. habilis. |
![]() | Walking with Cavemen - Part 2 Blood Brothers 3 of 3 2 million years B.C. - East Africa The second episode then leaps forward to a time when Paranthropus boisei, Homo habilis and Homo rudolfensis co-exist. H. habilis is depicted as an intelligent omnivore that is more adaptable than its herbivorous neighbours, being able to eat tall grasses in difficult times. It only briefly shows the H. rudolfensis, remarking that albeit they are taller, they are very similar to the H. habilis. |
![]() | Walking with Cavemen - Part 3 Savage Family 1 of 3 1.5 million years B.C. - Africa and Asia In the third episode, Homo ergaster is depicted as the first creature to master the art of tracking, and Homo erectus is shown spreading into Asia and encountering the enormous herbivoric Gigantopithecus. Some paleanthropologists do not recognize H. ergaster and H. erectus as separate species. |
![]() | Homo Erectus Official Web Trailer Official web trailer from the hilarious upcoming Caveman Comedy "Homo Erectus" Directed by Adam Rifkin and starring Adam Rifkin, Ali Larter, David Carradine, Talia Shire, Hayes MacArthur, Gary Busey, Tom Arnold, Giuseppe Anddrews, Miles Dougal, Ron Jeremy and Carol Alt. |
![]() | homo habilis 1 de una serie muy buena |
![]() | Neanderthal - Episode 1 - Part 1 of 5 Neanderthal was the story of the rise and fall of one of the most successful human species that ever lived. A species that survived for over a quarter of a million years, living through and adapting to the most violent extremes of climate. A species that thrived - until modern man came along. This revealing two-part drama documentary combined the latest scientific research with a stunning mixture of drama and cutting edge 3D animation to reconstruct the lives of these remarkable early humans. In the second part, the advanced Cro-Magnons arrive and a new Ice Age is dawning. Neanderthal or Neandertal, is the common name given to any individual of the species Homo sapiens neanderthalensis (also known as Homo neanderthalensis), and to the entire species. Neanderthals have often been regarded as a subspecies of modern human beings (Homo sapiens sapiens or just Homo sapiens), but increasingly they are treated as a distinct species. Neanderthal remains span a timescale ranging from about 120,000 to 30,000 years ago and have been found in Middle Stone Age sites mainly in Europe and south-west Asia. The species is named after a site in the Neander River valley (German, tal, "valley") where the first skeletal remains to be recognized as belonging to this type were found. Neanderthals had long, low, thick-boned skulls, with heavy brow ridges, in contrast to the high-domed, thin-walled skulls of modern human beings. The robust, heavily muscled frames of Neanderthals, with relatively long bodies and short legs, were well adapted to their hunter-gatherer lifestyle in the often extremely cold conditions leading up to the last Ice Age. Although males were more strongly built than females, both sexes were very muscular, even as children. Neanderthals had large heads with very large projecting noses and receding chins. On average their brains were as large or larger than the average modern human brain, which was probably related more to their large body size and heavy musculature, than heightened intelligence. Although Neanderthal technology was fairly simple, there is evidence that they were capable hunters, and that they demonstrated a degree of compassion by caring for the infirm and the disabled, and by burying their dead. It has been suggested that Neanderthals practised cannibalism, but there is little substantial evidence in the archaeological record to support this theory. While some scientists believe that Neanderthals did not have the brain capacity to produce art, evidence to the contrary is slowly emerging. In 2003 a Neanderthal "mask"—a face carved from flint with bone for eyes—was found on the banks of the River Loire in France, indicating that Neanderthals may have been more sophisticated than previously thought. Neanderthals disappeared from the archaeological record in Europe some 35,000 to 30,000 years ago, possibly as a result of the arrival of early modern people, who competed for the same resources |
![]() | Walking with Cavemen - Part 1 First Ancestors 1 of 3 3.5 million years B.C. - East Africa In the first episode, we see Australopithecus afarensis, specifically Lucy and her relatives. The show follows the tribe of apemen as the have internal conflicts following the death of the alpha male, and eventually an attack by a rival troupe. |
![]() | Walking with Cavemen - Part 3 Savage Family 2 of 3 1.5 million years B.C. - Africa and Asia In the third episode, Homo ergaster is depicted as the first creature to master the art of tracking, and Homo erectus is shown spreading into Asia and encountering the enormous herbivoric Gigantopithecus. Some paleanthropologists do not recognize H. ergaster and H. erectus as separate species. |
![]() | Walking with Cavemen - Part 4 The Survivors 1 of 3 500 thousand, 200 thousand and 140 thousand years B.C. - Europe In the fourth episode we leap forward to a time when Homo heidelbergensis is living in Britain. H. Heidelbergensis is depicted as intelligent and sensitive but lacking in the ability to comprehend an afterlife. Next, we see Homo neanderthalensis hunting mammoths during the Ice Age, and learn that they are intelligent but lack the imagination of modern humans. Finally, we see modern Homo sapiens (represented by Bushmen) in Africa, and glimpse the cave painters of Europe. Some paleanthropologists believe the African H. heidelbergensis is merely an archaic form of modern humans. Also whether H. neanderthalensis are actually a sub-species of Homo sapiens is also controversial among paleanthropologists. |
![]() | Walking with Cavemen - Part 1 First Ancestors 2 of 3 3.5 million years B.C. - East Africa In the first episode, we see Australopithecus afarensis, specifically Lucy and her relatives. The show follows the tribe of apemen as the have internal conflicts following the death of the alpha male, and eventually an attack by a rival troupe. |
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