
Earliest material practices involve atmosphere, water, earth, plants, animals and all humans. Immediate actions of full, real life need continuous interchange with all that is in the world. The animals and plants of Africa for 7 million years are gleaned to commence hominin evolution. The challenges of physical endeavour in Asia for all developing groups are demonstrated along the Brahmaputra, Ganges, Irrawaddy of India Bharat and Yangtze China where earliest cultures from 2 million years BCE skilfully sustain interactions of living.

Earliest Southeast Asian cultures develop along rivers and coasts
Herding and tending of wild plants in Africa 10,000 BCE comes with dairying then harvesting as early as nomadic groups develop the first agricultural communities. Cultivation of Emmer and Einkorn in the Near East then Neolithic villages in Syria and Anatolia provide resources for the earliest cities Jericho, Eridu, Ur and Kish. Earliest copper smelting furnaces of Negev alchemists at Beersheba Levant 5000 BCE introduce Southeast Europe to metals for Bronze Age cultures to develop. The earliest iron of the Hittites with metalworking trading with Indus Valley, Persians Sumerians and Hellenic Mediterranean world open opportunities for humans with skills to venture.

Indus Valley cities 5,000 BCE develop with humans and animals living in harmony with nature
From deep geology Darwin senses the immense evolutionary process of life on earth. That it really begins with the origin of the sun and earth 5,000,000,000 years BCE
becomes clear as molecular biology discovers earliest interchanges of life in deep sea hydrothermal vent precipitates and fractionated graphite zircon crystals before 4,000,000,000 BCE. So that the development of all materials in chemical evolution through atomic and molecular interactions may trace the origin of life to extraterrestrial interstellar sources. The continuous energy exchanges of evolving molecular processes in planetary atmospheres open perspectives for life sciences.

Atmosphere of Venus with all the chemical interactions of life but not as we know it
Rockets to the moon may not be necessary if we are in space already with human species developing in Africa. Sheba with her myrrh and Frankincense from Arabia brings life with strength. Hatshepsut’s sea voyage to Indian Ocean Punt enables her to make a life temple a wonder of the ancient world. The depth and power of Nubian Kandake Amanirenas to challenge Octavian Rome makes her the fiercest African warrior. Cleopatra chooses ancient Egypt and invites Caesar then Anthony to share her wealth preferring snakebite poison to Rome she free to make her world civilization.

IsisPtah Iiss Ptah IISSPTAH ISHPTAH Hatshepsut

