biochemical evidence anatomical evidence fossils vestigial structure embryological evidence
The strong evidence for the common ancestry of all vertebrates is THE SIMILARITY OF THEIR EMBRYOLOGICAL STAGES.
Such similarities are taken to be evidence of common ancestry.
Virtually everything about them, from their morphology to their embryological development to their behaviour to their genomes.
Embryological development in animals displays the same set of nested hierarchies that is known from comparative morphology and genetics, and thus evidence for common descent.Nota bene: this adherence to nested hierarchies is not to be confused with the 19th century hypothesis of ontogeny recapitulating phylogeny. Embryos do not go through evolutionary stages during their development, but they dodisplay atavistic developments that are consistent with phylogenies based on other sources.
What type of embryological cell gives rise to muscle fibers
Embryological development in animals displays the same set of nested hierarchies that is known from comparative morphology and genetics, and thus evidence for common descent.Nota bene: this adherence to nested hierarchies is not to be confused with the 19th century hypothesis of ontogeny recapitulating phylogeny. Embryos do not go through evolutionary stages during their development, but they dodisplay atavistic developments that are consistent with phylogenies based on other sources.
Embryological development is the development of an embryo. An embryo is the beginning stages of life. Humans, other animals and some plants have the embryonic stage.
i belive that an embryological relationship involves comparing the embryo with other animals that share the same habitat (i.e deserts, oceans, forests) to help taxonomists classify organisms
embryological development
A forgery case wuld be an excellent example of a case using 'writing' which becomes evidence.
An embryological feature of a conch is the presence of a planktonic larval stage called a veliger. Veligers have a shell and a ciliated velum used for swimming and feeding, before undergoing metamorphosis into the adult conch.