Chimpanzees are our closest living relative. We share 98% of their dna codes.
Modern humans are mostly related to the cro-magons, but there is some evidence that the Neanderthals (nee-ANN-der-talls) were ancestors of some modern humans.
this is related to your religious beliefs... but mostly NO
primates
Humans never existed with the Dinosaurs. While the dinosaurs lived the largest mammals were about the size of modern rats and were mostly nocturnal (active while the dinosaurs slept). It was not until all of the dinosaurs had died that mammals could risk coming out of hiding during the daytime. The dinosaurs had been dead for about 10 million years before the first primates evolved, and humans evolved from primates about 54 million years after that (dinosaurs had been dead roughly 64 million years before the first humans lived).
They can be both just like humans. However, most primates are left handed although humans and chimpanzees are mostly right handed. And then there are those who have no hand preference at all, but they are unusual.
The Evidence is that human-related fossils were mostly found in Africa and they were also artifacts related to humans
No. Few mammals undergo menstruation. It is mostly just the primates who do this.
The main evidence, though not conclusive, is from skeletal remain that show many similarities, and DNA composition.Many people have some misunderstanding and confusion about evolution and wonder why all animals don't develop into more complex species. There are some that have not changed significantly in millions of years, like the sharks. They've stayed the same for close to 100 million years.As far as the primates, if you think of family heritage playing a role, humans and the other apes descended from a common ancestor. That means that the family split and some changed into humans and other stayed mostly the same. Evolution does not say that all animals should evolve at the same rate or in the same way.In addition, humans are both primates and apes. The classification is as follows: Order: Primates, Family Hominidae (the great apes); Genus: Homo, Species: Homo sapiens.The apes and other primates alive today are not necessarily the same as they were at the time of the split from a common ancestor mentioned above. Pathways diverged countless millions of years ago. One led to humans, another led to the variety of contemporary primate species.
No, elephants are proboscidea. This order is mostly extinct since the last ice age, but also contained mammoths.
What organic molecule is mostly related to lipids
Lesser Pandas are mostly endangered because humans like the habitat of many Lesser Pandas. Lesser Pandas are mostly endangered because humans like the habitat of many Lesser Pandas.
Humans mostly