¿Qué Hacían los Cavernícolas Todo el Día Antes de que Existiera el Trabajo?

What did prehistoric humans do all day before work existed? The answer is more surprising than you might imagine. For 99% of human history, humans had no schedules, no bosses, and no Monday meetings. Anthropological studies show that hunter-gatherers spent barely 15-20 hours a week obtaining food. The rest of the time... they lived. In this video we explore: ➤ What a full day in prehistory was like, hour by hour ➤ Why prehistoric skeletons were healthier than those of early farmers ➤ What the Chauvet cave art tells us about leisure time in prehistory ➤ Why they slept in two phases and what happened in between ➤ How agriculture trapped us in a system with no way out ➤ What changed 10,000 years ago and why we call it "progress" 📚 Based on real studies by: Richard Lee (Ju/'hoansi people, Botswana, 1963) James Woodburn and social time among hunter-gatherers Polly Wiessner and nighttime conversations around the fire Archaeological evidence from the Chauvet, Blombos, and other cave sites If you've ever wondered why we work so hard, this video is for you. You. #Prehistory #HunterGatherers #HumanHistory #Anthropology #Cavemen #HistoryOfHumanity #Archaeology #PrehistoricLife #Neolithic #Evolution If you want to join the tribe and survive prehistory with us, subscribe and light the campfire 🔥. Each new video is an expedition to a world where only the strongest, most resourceful… or most curious… manage to survive. Grab your club, take a seat by the fire, and don't miss a single story. 🪨:    / @cavernicolas-n1f