Charles Darwin believed that apes evolved from earlier, more primitive species, which in turn evolved from even earlier species. Ultimately, all mammals, including the apes and humans, evolved from the first mammal species, which in turn evolved from earlier species, and so on back to the beginning of life on Earth.
Yes, humans are classified as animals and have evolved from earlier primate ancestors over millions of years through the process of evolution. The theory of evolution explains how all species, including humans, have descended from common ancestors through natural selection and adaptation to their environments.
Darwin is significant for his theory of evolution through natural selection, which revolutionized our understanding of the development of life on Earth. His work laid the foundation for modern biology and has had a profound impact on fields ranging from genetics to anthropology. Darwin's ideas continue to influence scientific research and contribute to our understanding of the diversity of life.
The Aeta people are an indigenous group residing in the Philippines, believed to be among the first inhabitants of the archipelago. They have a long history in the region and have traditionally lived a hunter-gatherer lifestyle in the mountains and forests.
they came from primates such as bonoboes, chimpanzees, gorillas, lar gibbons, and orangutans. thoes apes came from lemurs, old world monkeys, new world monkeys, and other primates Wow, this answer needs soooo much work I am not sure where to begin You have the germ of the idea correct (Evolved) but naming modern day primates and saying cavemen came from them is , on the face of it, absurd. (MAN is not the only thing that evolves, other primates did too...) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_human_evolution is the best way to go here...
Answer 1Current thinking is that humans and apes evolved from a common ancestor and scientists are getting closer and closer to telling us that story of our origins.On October 9, 2009 scientists announced the discovery of the oldest fossil skeleton of a human ancestor to date. It has taken the spotlight off "Lucy", who walked the earth 3.2 million years ago. The discovery was made in Ethiopia. Researchers say it will put to rest the earlier hypothesis of a "missing link" ape that would be found "at the root of the human family tree". The skeleton offers a basis for researchers of what the common ancestor of apes and humans might have been like. There have been astounding archeological discoveries in the last decade that have enabled evolutionists to discard older suppositions and add more information to the story of evolution.On May 7, 2010 scientists announced they had documented the Neanderthal genome and revealed some interesting facts. We have traces of Neanderthal DNA in our DNA, proving that earlier ancestors assimilated with other early humans.The study of human evolution is not static. It is going on every day at universities and archeological sights around the world. As new information is discovered the story becomes more accurate. Anyone who can ignore the abundant results of that research is missing out on a treasure trove of interesting information about where we came from.In 2012 scientists completed the genome of the bonobo, an African ape. When added to the genomes that have already been completed for orangutans, gorillas and chimpanzees we now have a complete DNA catalogue of the great apes. The studies show that humans are most closely related to bonobos and chimpanzees. The three are more closely related to each other than any is to gorillas.Answer 2In addition to the previous answer, it should be noted that according to classical Linnaean taxonomy and modern cladistics, humans are apes. And since we share that distinction with a number of other species, it must therefore logically be true that the ancestors we and those other species of ape evolved from was also an ape.This does not mean that they were any species of modern ape, of course. Modern species of ape are derived from the basal clade of apes.
Man did not originate from apes per se, rather we share a common ancestor with them. This is a common misconception about evolution. Humans evolved to fit their environment, apes evolved to fit theirs.
adaptive radiation
That we came from monkeys or apes, we came from a common ancestor from apes.
The original 'Planet of the Apes' came out in 1968 film and the remake came out in 2001.
da planted of apes
This statement is believed to originate from the Hippocratic Oath which doctors have to recite.There are however many opinions with regard to its origin but it is widely believed that it came from the Hippocratic Oath. It is also believed to be the first law of morality.
Humans evolved from apes. So Apes came first.
Humans came from a common ancestor with apes. Not directly.
Monkeys / apes or homosapiens
1968 , the original was made .
This is something that is often misunderstood. Humans and apes evolved from a common ancestor. Humans did not 'come' from apes.
because apes came before humans did. you see apes starting loosing their hair and kind' of looked like people. hope this helped you