Monday, Apr 20, 2026
English News
  • Hyderabad
  • Telangana
  • AP News
  • India
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Sport
  • Science and Tech
  • Business
  • Rewind
  • ...
    • NRI
    • View Point
    • cartoon
    • My Space
    • Education Today
    • Reviews
    • Property
    • Lifestyle
E-Paper
  • NRI
  • View Point
  • cartoon
  • My Space
  • Reviews
  • Education Today
  • Property
  • Lifestyle
Home | Explainer | Early Humans Survived Extreme Environments Before Global Migration

Early humans survived extreme environments before global migration

A new study published in Nature suggests that ancient Homo sapiens developed exceptional ecological flexibility long before their global migration around 50,000 years ago

By AP
Published Date - 19 June 2025, 12:43 PM
Early humans survived extreme environments before global migration
whatsapp facebook twitter telegram

Washington: Humans are the only animal that lives in virtually every possible environment, from rainforests to deserts to tundra. This adaptability is a skill that long predates the modern age.

According to a new study published on Wednesday in Nature, ancient Homo sapiens developed the flexibility to survive by finding food and other resources in a wide variety of difficult habitats before they dispersed from Africa about 50,000 years ago.


“Our superpower is that we are ecosystem generalists,” said Eleanor Scerri, an evolutionary archaeologist at the Max Planck Institute of Geoanthropology in Jena, Germany.

Our species first evolved in Africa around 300,000 years ago. While prior fossil finds show some groups made early forays outside the continent, lasting human settlements in other parts of the world didn’t happen until a series of migrations around 50,000 years ago.

“What was different about the circumstance of the migrations that succeeded — why were humans ready this time?” said study co-author Emily Hallett, an archaeologist at Loyola University Chicago.

Earlier theories held that Stone Age humans might have made a single important technological advance or developed a new way of sharing information, but researchers haven’t found evidence to back that up. This study took a different approach by looking at the trait of flexibility itself.

The scientists assembled a database of archaeological sites showing human presence across Africa from 120,000 to 14,000 years ago. For each site, researchers modeled what the local climate would have been like during the time periods that ancient humans lived there.

“There was a really sharp change in the range of habitats that humans were using starting around 70,000 years ago,” Hallet said. “We saw a really clear signal that humans were living in more challenging and more extreme environments.”

While humans had long survived in savanna and forests, they shifted into everything from from dense rainforests to arid deserts in the period leading up to 50,000 years ago, developing what Hallet called an “ecological flexibility that let them succeed.”

While this leap in abilities is impressive, it’s important not to assume that only Homo sapiens did it, said University of Bordeaux archaeologist William Banks, who was not involved in the research. Other groups of early human ancestors also left Africa and established long-term settlements elsewhere, including those that evolved into Europe’s Neanderthals, he said.

The new research helps explain why humans were ready to expand across the world way back when, he said, but it doesn’t answer the lasting question of why only our species remains today.

  • Follow Us :
  • Tags
  • Africa
  • early humans
  • extreme climate
  • fossils

Related News

  • Iran war energy shock drives nuclear power plans in hard-hit Asia, Africa

    Iran war energy shock drives nuclear power plans in hard-hit Asia, Africa

  • Where do seashells come from?

    Where do seashells come from?

  • Trump’s expanded travel ban hits Africa hardest but reactions muted

    Trump’s expanded travel ban hits Africa hardest but reactions muted

  • Spain records first human-to-human transmission of mpox clade 1b outside Africa

    Spain records first human-to-human transmission of mpox clade 1b outside Africa

Latest News

  • Massive fire breaks out at pharma unit in Sangareddy

    5 seconds ago
  • Virudhunagar firecracker unit blast: Toll climbs to 25, Rs 5.5 lakh ex gratia announced 

    5 mins ago
  • Punjab police bust foreign-linked gangster module, 4 held

    15 mins ago
  • 3.5-hour ordeal: Hyderabad-Hubballi Fly91 flight diverted to Bengaluru

    18 mins ago
  • SC rejects Umar Khalid’s review plea in Delhi riots case

    22 mins ago
  • Telangana intermediate supplementary exam fee deadline extended

    24 mins ago
  • Udhampur bus accident: CM Abdullah announces Rs 2 lakh ex-gratia for victims

    43 mins ago
  • Exercise caution while reporting crimes against women, avoid media trials: NCW chairperson

    47 mins ago

company

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy

business

  • Subscribe

telangana today

  • Telangana
  • Hyderabad
  • Latest News
  • Entertainment
  • World
  • Andhra Pradesh
  • Science & Tech
  • Sport

follow us

  • Telangana Today Telangana Today
Telangana Today Telangana Today

© Copyrights 2024 TELANGANA PUBLICATIONS PVT. LTD. All rights reserved. Powered by Veegam

.