A professor in Human development, Lee Birgeh, and his teamwork in the University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, analyzed 200 skeletons of an old species, who lived two million years ago and used fire and stones as tools. These skeletons were found in southern Africa, the place known as the “cradle of humanity.” There were skeletons of newborn, kid and women. Researchers explored the brain, hand, pelvic and feet of the skeletons that sank in a cave during the water rise. Africa was inhabited by the first human being species, who traveled from Africa across the world and lived across Earth. Sydiba excavations are searching for the earliest man, the first human being. The skeletons are similar to the species that climbed trees, was bipedal and had a larger than average skull.