No. Humans are not made from stars. However, every element in the human body except hydrogen and perhaps lithium came from an exploding star. The human body contains carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, iron, chlorine, sulphur, and a number of other elements, all made in stars. All became available for other uses when the stars exploded.
We ARE Homo Sapiens, and haven't evolved away from it yet.
Tempting as the thought might be - no. Humans didn't come from cows-as-we-know-them. But cows and humans are both vertebrates and placental mammals, so way back when there is a common ancestor. A fairly small mammal that branched off time after time- One line eventually turning out cows and another eventually turning out humans.
Many scientists believe that humans and monkeys share a common ancestor, but it was not an intentional evolution by a god. Evolution is a natural process driven by genetic variations and environmental factors over millions of years.
Human Beings evolved from the mud worm (as did many other species). Scientists recently discovered that before today's Human Being, there were several species of humans that existed in Africa. References - PBS Documentary, Becoming Human: Nova (Episodes 1-3) Note: There were no human beings or chimps 4 billion years ago because at that time, the earth was only 600 million years old. Despite what some believe, Humans did not exist when dinosaurs existed.
I have a sea star, a mollusc, and a mushroom. The sea star is most closely related to a human.
No
What causes star to evolve is mass.
Not likely dogs and cats are intellegent but are not able to evolve like humans do.
The humans evolved in 2000. They evolve if they visit other planets and survive without air. They evolve into a 7 foot tall green creature.
No, humans did not evolve from reptiles. Both humans and reptiles share a common ancestor from millions of years ago, but they evolved along separate paths.
There is no animal to EVOLVE, but the closest animal to humans is the Chimpanzee.
yes
yes and no
Probably not, but that is not for sure.
autotrophs
robots.
No