Environmental Sciences, asked by rumpa0, 1 month ago

HOW EARLY HUMAN’S WERE DEPENDENT ON NATURE & FOREST FOR THEIR SURVIVAL full paragraph​

Answers

Answered by 3xclusive
1

Explanation:

☛The importance of forests cannot be underestimated.

We depend on forests for our survival, from the air we breathe to the wood we use. Besides providing habitats for animals and livelihoods for humans, forests also offer watershed protection, prevent soil erosion and mitigate climate change. Yet, despite our dependence on forests, we are still allowing them to disappear.

◉ How have forests affected your life today?

Have you had your breakfast? Travelled to work in a bus or car? Sat on a chair? Made a shopping list? Got a parking ticket? Blown your nose into a tissue? Forest products are a vital part of our daily lives in more ways than we can imagine.

➽ Over 2 billion people rely on forests

Forests provide us with shelter, livelihoods, water, food and fuel security. All these activities directly or indirectly involve forests. Some are easy to figure out - fruits, paper and wood from trees, and so on. Others are less obvious, such as by-products that go into everyday items like medicines, cosmetics and detergents.

➽ Habitats for biodiversity and livelih-

ood for humans:-

Looking at it beyond our narrow, human – not to mention urban – perspective, forests provide habitats to diverse animal species. They are home to 80% of the world’s terrestrial biodiversity, and they also form the source of livelihood for many different human settlements, including 60 million indigenous people

Answered by TokyoLights
2

Answer:

Hi,

Explanation:

Living as we do with mass-produced food, markets, and restaurants in every town, and giant supermarket complexes that are often just down the road, it takes some imagination to think of finding food every day in the natural environment. Yet that is just what humans (Homo sapiens) have done for most of their time on Earth — from their appearance about 200,000 years ago until about 11,000 years ago when they began to develop agriculture. Before Homo sapiens evolved, our hominine ancestors foraged for millions of years.

Humans are not the only creatures who forage; many animals do too. What is different about human foraging? Answers may vary, but the common idea would be that humans, by means of our ability to communicate verbally, accumulated knowledge, passed it on to younger generations, and worked together cooperatively. These skills enabled humans to gradually refine their foraging methods, further distinguishing us from some of our competitors in the animal kingdom.

In fact, one could say that foraging made us human. As fruit trees in the rain forest became less abundant in the cooling, drying climate, the hominines who survived had to find other food sources. As they did, many traits evolved: walking on two feet (bipedalism), loss of most hair, smaller intestines, larger brains, and better communication. These are essentially the hallmarks of being human.

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