First man born in world
The first human being born in Africa
And human born from monkey development
Current knowledge shows that Humans came out of Africa.
The thing is you can't think of it as modern day Africa, the image below is the migration of Humans.
World map of human migrations, with the North Pole at center. Africa, harboring the start of the migration, is at the top left and South America at the far right. Migration patterns are based on studies of mitochondrial (matrilinear) DNA. Dashed lines are hypothetical migrations.
Numbers represent thousand years before present.
The blue line represents area covered in ice or tundra during the last great ice age.
The letters are the mitochondrial DNA haplogroups (pure motherly lineages); Haplogroups can be used to define genetic populations and are often geographically oriented. For example, the following are common divisions for mtDNA haplogroups:
African: L, L1, L2, L3
Near Eastern: J, N
Southern European: J, K
General European: H, V
Northern European: T, U, X
Asian: A, B, C, D, E, F, G (note: M is composed of C, D, E, and G)
Native American: A, B, C, D, and sometimes X
This is a little 80 second video of continental movement from 400 million years ago to 250 million in the future.
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Gwydion Madawc Williams
Gwydion Madawc Williams
The first diagram is very nice. Please let us know where it came from.
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OTHER ANSWERS
Tim Doran Palmer
Tim Doran Palmer, Freelance Writer/http://insanelogic
Answered Aug 11, 2014
Between 300,000 to 400,000 years ago, an ancestral group of Homo heidelbergensis left Africa and then split shortly after. One branch ventured northwestward into West Asia and Europe and became the Neanderthals. The other branch moved east, becoming Denisovans. By 130,000 years ago H. heidelbergensis in Africa had become Homo sapiens. Our modern human ancestors did not begin their own exodus from Africa until about 60,000 years ago, when they expanded into Eurasia and encountered their ancient cousins. Best scientist can tell, somewhere between this time frame and 3.7 million years back our ancestors were born and more then likely what we call Africa now.
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Kjell Pettersson
Kjell Pettersson, Generalist triangulating first principles, domain data and experience/intuition
Answered Aug 8, 2014
I'll understand man to be human.
I'll give the answer that if we consider human to be Homo Sapiens and we think of what Homo Sapiens means; the thinking or knowledgeable human ("wise man" really), the birth of the first Homo Sapiens would have been not when someone was born as a physical being.
Rather, if we assume it was not so gradual a process so as to be virtually impossible to detect, it would have been a defining event during a pre-human's lifetime.
An "aha!" moment.
I'd also say that it might very well be the case it was not an individual's experience, but a shared experience. Being human is to a very large extent about being part of something that it is possible this aha-moment would need to happen as a moment of shared understanding. That is, about language. An act of communication.
It really could be argued we were not humans until we had language, so I'll make that my final suggestion: Adam and Eve, or Steve, had their first talk, and thereby established the first humans.
This the human life history if you like is up vote
Thank for reading this