Four of the Galapagos Islands are inhabited by humans: Santa Cruz, San Cristobal, Isabela, and Floreana. (In order or population from highest to lowest).
No. While most modern humans have 1 to 4 percent Neanderthal DNA in them, Sub-Saharan Africans don't have any.
There is no evidence that Australopithecus wore clothes. The first evidence for the making of clothes is not until we see later members of our own genus, Homo.They didn't wear any clothes, they didn't have the tools for making any clothes.
If early humans crossed paths with other species, such as Neanderthals, there may have been competition for resources, potential interbreeding, or even conflict. These interactions could have influenced human evolution and the development of societies.
The Neanderthals painted caves and carved. Artwork among earlier hominid species is not known. The Denisovans apparently wore jewelry, indicating they engaged in artwork. They died out about ten thousand years earlier than the Neandertal (so far as is known). Homo floresiensis also likely engaged in artwork. This diminutive people inhabited what is now Indonesia, and survived up until about 20,000 years ago, ten thousand years longer than the Neandertal. Although floresiensis brains were very small, their tools were fairly sophisticated, and they cooked stegodon meat. [Stegodons are an extinct breed of elephant--NOT a dinosaur. Humans and dinosaurs never coexisted.] It is very likely the hobbit people engaged in art, though few if any examples of this have survived.
Yes, Cro-Magnon (early modern humans) had teeth that were similar to those of modern humans. They had teeth adapted for a varied diet, including incisors, canines, premolars, and molars. Dental remains of Cro-Magnon individuals have been found which provide information about their oral health and diet.
There are no mountains is Galapagos islands.
The Galapagos are islands, not in any states.
yes
yes
Nobody Knows. The Galapagos Islands are a tricky biome. Like any island, the Galapagod Islands do not have any specific biome. The closest any scientist and gotten to the specific biome is Tropical Rainforest.
Yes. There were formed by volcanoes.
Im totes not sure bro
You don't need any immunizations to go to the Galapagos Islands. There's no danger of contagious diseases on this Archipelago.
The Galapagos are volcanic islands off the west coast of South America. They rise form the sea floor and are not part of any continent. They do however come under the political sovereignty of Ecuador.
The usual sailing time for a motorised yacht from the Galapagos Islands to the Marquesas Islands and then on after a stop to New Zealand Coromandel area is not known and it may be in any given time.
Of course! Hawaii is one of the more popular inhabited islands.
Galapagos Islands