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Human Migration
Over tens of thousands of years, humans spread from Africa to every continent on Earth (except Antarctica). This incredible migration story is about adaptation, knowledge, courage, and resilience. Your learner will trace the routes humans took, imagine the challenges they faced in new climates and landscapes, and understand how tools, clothing, fire, and cooperation made it all possible. It's a profound reminder that all humans share this common heritage of exploration and adaptation.
- Human migration was driven by climate change, food availability, and curiosity.
- Cultural knowledge (fire, tools, clothing) was as important as physical adaptation.
- Humans used land bridges, boats, and coastlines to travel long distances.
- Adaptation allowed humans to thrive in deserts, tundra, forests, and islands.
- DK's Science as You've Never Seen it Before: N/A
- Mammoth Science: Climate pg. 146
- Visual Timelines: Life on Earth pg. 114-115, 119, 122-123
- Alternatives
| ✏️ Notebooking Activity Draw your own migration map detailing how Homo sapiens migrated out of Africa. |
Five minutes to midnight on the Cosmic Calendar. Read the script below before the lesson.
Read aloud: 11:55 PM on December 31st. Five minutes to midnight on our Cosmic Calendar. Beginning around 115,000 years ago, modern humans began spreading out from Africa. By about 35,000 years ago, people had reached most of the habitable world. On our calendar, this migration happened between 11:55 and 11:58 PM. Three cosmic minutes for humans to spread across the entire planet. We tend to think of history as a long, slow story. But on this calendar, the human story is happening in a breathless rush right at the very end. We’re almost out of time.
- c. 300,000 years ago – Early Homo sapiens appear in Africa
- c. 200,000–130,000 years ago – Humans begin migrating within Africa
- c. 70,000–60,000 years ago – Major migration out of Africa into the Middle East
- c. 50,000 years ago – Humans reach South Asia and Australia (via land bridges and boats)
- c. 45,000 years ago – Humans spread into Europe
- c. 30,000–20,000 years ago – Humans adapt to extreme cold in Siberia
- c. 20,000–15,000 years ago – Humans enter the Americas
- c. 12,000 years ago – Humans are living on every continent except Antarctica
- Why did humans move to new places?
Sample answer: Humans moved to find food, water, and safe places to live. - How did humans stay warm in cold places?
Sample answer: They wore animal skins and used fire. - How did humans help each other while traveling?
Sample answer: They shared food, skills, and knowledge. - What problems did humans face when moving into new environments?
Sample answer: Humans faced new climates, animals, plants, and landscapes.
- Why was cultural adaptation important for human survival?
Sample answer: Culture allowed humans to adapt quickly using tools, clothing, and shared knowledge. - How did climate changes affect human migration?
Sample answer: Climate changes created land bridges and changed migration routes.
- Migration — The movement of people or animals from one region to another; early humans migrated from Africa to every other continent.
- Homo sapiens — The scientific name for modern humans; our species appeared in Africa about 300,000 years ago and spread across the globe.
- Beringia — The land bridge between Asia and North America exposed during the last Ice Age.
- Cultural Adaptation — The use of knowledge, tools, clothing, and social practices to survive in new environments.
- Climate — The long-term pattern of weather in a region; changes in climate drove much of early human migration.
- Wayfinding — The skill of navigating without maps or instruments, using stars, ocean currents, and landmarks.
Videos:
- Ripan Malhi
- Ripan Malhi: Partnerships with First Nations of BC on Studies that include DNA Analysis
- Dr. Ripan Malhi: Santa Barbara Symposium on Human Origins II
- On Indigenous DNA Studies and Community Engagement
Digging Deeper Activity:
What is ancient DNA and how do scientists extract it from remains that are thousands of years old? Research one finding from ancient DNA research that has changed what we know about human migration into the Americas. Then discuss: why does it matter who is doing the science and how they involve the communities whose history is being studied?
- Homo sapiens idaltu— An early modern human from Ethiopia, about 160,000 years old; considered one of the oldest known anatomically modern humans.
- Mammut americanum (American Mastodon)— One of the large mammals that early humans encountered upon crossing Beringia into the Americas.
- Diprotodon— A giant wombat-like marsupial that roamed Australia; it went extinct shortly after the first humans arrived on the continent.
- Homo floresiensis— A tiny hominin nicknamed “the hobbit”; it survived on the island of Flores in Indonesia until as recently as 50,000 years ago.
- Smithsonian Human Origins Program. (n.d.). Human migration and population genetics. https://humanorigins.si.edu/research/human-migration-genetics
- National Geographic Society. (n.d.). Introduction to human migration. https://education.nationalgeographic.org/resource/introduction-to-human-migration/
- Smithsonian Institution. (n.d.). Genetics and genomics. Smithsonian Human Origins Program. https://humanorigins.si.edu/evidence/genetics
- Kiddle. (n.d.). Early human migrations facts for kids. https://kids.kiddle.co/Early_human_migrations
- SciShow. (2025, May 15). When did humans actually get to the Americas? [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fs53QhJM9FA
- Professor Dave Explains. (2025, April 14). Out of Africa (archaeological evidence of human migration) [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lK4QrbkKboU
- Sealaska Heritage Institute. (2019, February 21). On Indigenous DNA studies and community engagement [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6iF1zEopuR0
- PBS Eons. (2019, May 7). When we took over the world [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xmboVmtqNJc