Evolution is the process of change that living organisms go through to evolve from previous forms.
that is something that has been up to debate for a Very long time, the answer is unknown at the moment.
there are more organisms in the environment than can possibly survive. This sets up a struggle to survive. The organism that are beat-suited to the environment will survive and reproduce. :)
You do the Sernarios and the more you do the more characters you unlock. Not Just That But You Can Also Unlock More Characters By Doing Item Fusion Item Fusion Can Be Located In Z Evloution On The Main Menu It Is Easy, If You Know How To Do It
this depends what you mean by ape men as there are a number of recognisable species of human that have existed through the evloution of the species. for a good answer i would sugest that you phrase the question better and more specificly, alternately you could look up the "evoloution of man" on google
water is one of the main elements that is used support life such as in a rain drop there are millions of tiny bacteria and other cells that could possibly form in to other more complex orgasimins if evloution see fit. also water is used in the body to clean out the system
False. Darwin's theory of evolution greatly influenced the way species were classified. It led to the development of phylogenetic classification based on common ancestry, replacing the earlier morphological classification system. This new approach considers evolutionary relationships when grouping species together.
Darwin's classic theory of evolution assumed that evolution is a slow, contunuous process, by which new species evolve and emerge. This is referred to at times as "organic evolution" and the "synthetic theory of evolution", or just the Darwinian theory of evolution. A newer theory, proposed originally by Niles Eldridge and Stephen Jay Gould is known as "punctuated equilibria", a model in which the evloution of new species occurs only periodically, in relatively rapid spurts. See "Time Frames the Rethinking of Darwinian Evolution and the Theory of Punctuated Equilibraia, Simon & Schuster, 1985"AnswerThe slow, constant process has also been called "gradualism."