Very little is known about prehistoric fossils, except medicine, implements and cave drawings. Ill-health shows traces of human remains and broken bones were a common problem. It is believed that prehistoric man like animals, licking wounds, resting when sick or injured, seeking warmth when cold and cold when it's hot.
Prehistoric medicine and religion
Divine Intervention is certainly precedes the prehistoric medicine. Possible evidence shows that what we call holistic medicine today has always been instilled perhaps part of human nature. It seems to have always been unanimous awareness of good and evil in all cultures. Since the beginning of recorded history, medicine and religion co-existed and necessary inference, prehistoric medicine and religion.
Humanity is probably blamed for the evil spirits of disease and pestilence. The petition for a divine power included prayers and rituals in the name of welfare. This is one of the first principles of prehistoric medicine, which lasted until the present day. This is the one that was dropped from the mainstream of modern Western medicine, which is incomplete, despite scientific advances in human health.
Cave drawings showing images depicting the human body with the head of a deer might be a shaman or medicine man. Such specialists in prehistoric medicine relied on human sacrifices and incantations and chanting to the Supreme Being (s) on behalf of ailing people, infusing inanimate objects such as bones or sticks, the evil spirit of disease or ill, thereby removing an evil spirit from that people.
Prehistoric medicine and agriculture
man became aware of certain medicinal plants and incorporated it into his growing knowledge of medicine. Perhaps the sight of the Adamic garden, and some Chinese pictographs that have survived from ancient times, showing a garden scene in striking detail the prehistoric medicine at its dawn.
setting broken limbs do not seem to have been practiced in prehistoric medicine, although it may be done with wooden splints. Plants are one of these, as well as religious incantations and prayers for the removal of evil spirits and asking for dobrobit.Vrlo little understanding of human anatomy probably came from an open timber of human cadavers.
setting broken limbs do not seem to have been practiced in prehistoric medicine, although it may be done with wooden splints. Plants are one of these, as well as religious incantations and prayers for the removal of evil spirits and asking for dobrobit.Vrlo little understanding of human anatomy probably came from an open timber of human cadavers.
...Prehistoric to modern medicine and alternative medicine
oldest American population that is claimed to have ventured out of Africa and the ancient European cultures and transferred to the Far East as it was in prehistoric times. If these people settled in the Far East for any length of time, they May have brought medical knowledge as it is not known to the American continent during the Ice Age. Migrating across the American continent they brought their medical knowledge with them and making adjustments to the new ADO with the resources available to them. For the most part, these people have become lost in the culture of the time, although remaining in prehistoric holistic living.
Europeans make landfall on the North much later and the American domestic medical knowledge passed on to their still quite primitive and medieval medical knowledge. It is now known that many of the native American treatment procedures were better than those of Europeans in the earliest times. Indeed, some of them came to us in conventional medicine today.
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