With the discovery of fire, Homo erectus became even more adept at survival. Fire allowed them to cook their food, to stay warm in cool environments, and to utilize caves as shelter.
www.kidspast.com/world-history/0010-homo-erectus.php www.kidspast.com/world-history/0010-homo-erectus.php
I have found out that they lived in caves. Maybe in grass/stick huts.
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_did_Homo_erectus_use_for...
Homo Erectus question: What is homo erectus use for there shelter? Sticks and animal hides. ... Discuss the question "What is homo erectus use for there shelter?"
wiki.answers.com/Q/What_is_homo_erectus_use_for_there_s... wiki.answers.com/Q/What_is_homo_erectus_use_for_there_shelter
Homo erectus - Homo erectus is a hominid species designated to the Homo genus that exhibits a morphology of a warmer climate. ... Homo erectus | return to species list...
www.archaeologyinfo.com/homoerectus.htm www.archaeologyinfo.com/homoerectus.htm
The earliest creatures of the human genus are Homo habilis and Homo erectus, users of stone tools, with enlarged brains. ... F-2. HOMO HABILIS AND HOMO ERECTUS:
www.ecotao.com/holism/hu_habilis.htm
Homo erectus man was about the same size as modern humans, although they only had two-thirds the size of our brains. Their tool-making skills were considerably improved. Their weapons included stone axes and knives. ... They no longer had to shelter out of the wind, unless they chose to do so. If their fire went out,
www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Sciences/LifeScience/Physi... www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Sciences/LifeScience/PhysicalAnthropology/PrehistoricMan/HomoErectus/HomoErectus.htm
Homo erectus was the first hominid believed with some certainty to have ventured out of Africa adapting to temperate and arctic as well as tropical climates. ... There is some rather questionable evidence for the use of temporary shelter and the mere fact of occupation of cold climate suggests the use of clothing.
www.mines.edu/fs_home/jsneed/courses/LISS.380-83/LISS.3... www.mines.edu/fs_home/jsneed/courses/LISS.380-83/LISS.380/syllabus/week.1/session.2/erectus/index.shtml
The shelter would have been built by an ancient ancestor of humans, Homo erectus, who is known to have used stone tools. The site has been dated to half a million years ago, according to a report in New Scientist.
www.crystalinks.com/shelters.html www.crystalinks.com/shelters.html
Brian Deer investigates the origins of our species ... NATURE'S PREY; Brian Deer investigates evolution ... Classic narratives on the rise of ancestors to the human species have long stressed weapons and aggression as key factors. But when Brian Deer travelled to the East African sites where investigators forged such deeply...
briandeer.com/homo-erectus.htm briandeer.com/homo-erectus.htm
Lower and Middle Pleistocene - Homo erectus and Homo sapiens ... By upper Acheulen times there is evidence of postholes for a shelter, fire and ochre at the site.
www.leeds.ac.uk/chb/lectures/anthl_01.html