The speech of the first people was poor in sounds and included many gestures. All women were addressed with the sound "I", with different intonations depending on age and rank, since they stood at the head of families, clans and the whole tribe.
Yarangi were also built in groups by birth and each family had a family: a woman, her children, her kind of husband, who was in the same rank as children. Mothers prepared sons for other families and gave them cattle and other property.
Father and his sons ate long fried meat, smoked and dried fish with steamed blueberries and blueberries and baked calamus tubers. And, climbing under the skins, they fell asleep under the howl of a spring blizzard, and could sleep for several days in a row, because they were very tired of deer.
The tribe collected fish at the rapids of the river. Ice hummocks exploded there all winter, and threw fish on coastal stones and on the island, and froze them. This was used by foxes and other animals. In the summer, when the river opened, fish were caught in wicker baskets and buried in pits with permafrost.
Several woolly rhinos (the first heralds of the spring migration of animals) appeared on the island and ate gnats. Along with mammoths, cave bears and lions, a contemporary of an ancient man in the last ice age was a rhino overgrown with wool – elmasater. In size, it was more than an African rhino weighed up to four tons. But since he lived in a harsh climate, his body was covered with thick dark brown hair.
Either they, or the sun, woke up big black bears wintering in the spruce windbreak. The bears viciously snarled at the rhinos, which prevented them from going ashore. The tribe did not hunt rhino, because this two-ton monster in anger rushed even at the mammoth, and the wolves crushed like kittens.
Constantly on the island there lived people of an ancient kind of fishermen, from whom the Amazon tribe came. At the top of the mountainous part of the island was a cave – the tomb of the Father of the Amazons.
The sun woke up large black bears wintering in the thicket of spruce windbreak. The bears viciously snarled at the rhinos, which prevented them from going ashore. The tribe did not hunt rhino, because this two-ton monster in anger rushed even at the mammoth, and the wolves crushed like kittens.