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No, humans descended from ape-like ancestors. Evidence suggests that the human line split from the first gorillas around four to eight million years ago.
Protease enzme came from a human.
We find human activity in the closest layer. The layer is troposphere.
there is no evidence that the human eye is an organ as we need organs to survive, if we didnt have an organ, we would eventually die, but people can live without eyes.
ancestry
their best relatives
Africa.
The phylum Chordata is considered to be the closest relative to humans. Within Chordata, the subphylum Vertebrata, which includes animals with a backbone, is the most closely related to humans.
All of the evidence that has been accumulated suggests that there was no "first human". Humans gradually became differentiated from their ancestors.
There aren't any (you're not a plant); The closest relative would be the mitochondria.
children work very long hours
Paleontological evidence suggests that the human species, Homo sapiens, originated in Africa about half a million years ago.
Bonobo apes ( very close relative to the chimpanzee ) have hands very much like our own.
The continent of Africa is believed to have been settled first by early human ancestors. Archaeological evidence suggests that human ancestors began to populate Africa around 2 million years ago.
No, humans descended from ape-like ancestors. Evidence suggests that the human line split from the first gorillas around four to eight million years ago.
All evidence suggests that humans originated in Africa and migrated slowly outwards. The time line is somewhat problematical.
Well...before humans were around there were this type of primate which walked on two legs and had the same things human have but with a monkey like face so that is the closest relative but the distant i'd have to say would be a type of fish because fish were the first animals on earth