No. They are separate species of humans.
You can find pictures of Neanderthals on reputable websites such as the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, the Natural History Museum in London, or academic journals like the journal Nature. These sources provide accurate and scientifically vetted images of Neanderthals.
So far it is believed that Homo Sapiens have been on Earth for approximately 200,000 to 250,000 years. However this estimation could change at any given time, should further evidence of Homo Sapiens being around earlier be found, which at the moment is looking unlikely.Although Homo Sapiens showed up around 200,000 - 250,000 years ago, civilisation as we know it has only been around for about 6,000 years. So Homo Sapiens were around a long time before they became the civilised variant that we know today. Industrialisation of civilisation only begun around 215 years ago (from 2015) in the 1800's.
The genus Homo erectus was originated in Africa and spread all the way to China and Java. They were considered to be a direct ancestor of modern humans. They migrated during the Early Pleistocene around 2.0 million years ago and spread around to the rest of the Old World. Scientists have found fossilized remains that were 1.8 and 1.0 million years old. Some Scientist believe that Homo erectus and Homo ergaster are separate species, but others think they are one group called (Homo sapiens). There are other closely related species like Homo georigicus, and Homo habilis. Homo ergaster is an extinct homo species. They lived in southern and eastern Africa about 1.9 million years ago (during the Pliocene epoch). They are probably extinct because of their deformities. Such as their thinner skull bones, lack of an obvious supraorbital sulcus, protruding face, and lower forehead. These deformities caused them many disadvantages. The population of Homo georgicus is very small. There fossils are about 1.8 million years old. There remains were discovered in 1991 by David Lordkipanidze and his international team. A partial skeleton was discovered in 2001. They also found Implements and animal bones alongside the ancient homo remains. Homo habilis lived from 2.5-1.6 million years ago. Mary and Louis Leakey found fossils in Tanzania, East Africa between 1962 and 1964. Homo habilis is the earliest known species of Homo erectus. Homo habilis is the least similar species to modern humans than any other homo type. Homo habilis were short and had unusually long arms. Homo erectus people started being found in the early 1960s. Erectus is one of the better known members of genus Homo. Some people think that erectus is a wrong group of organisms. Others think that they should be split into many groups. That they split up Asia and then Africa. Questions about how Homo erectus evolved are still under disagreement. Homo erectus means "upright man" who lived about 1.8 million years ago. They disappeared about 70,000 years ago. Homo erectus people are right in the middle of Homo habilis and Homo sapiens. Homo erectus is thought as an ancestor of Homo sapiens. Homo erectus people had more human like characteristics, for example a more upright-standing. They also had a larger brain. Their brains were 75% the size of Homo sapiens. Their heads were less sloping, their teeth were smaller, and they developed more complex tools. Some of those tools were used for 1.2 million years ago to about 500,000 years ago. Some of the tools I talked about in the last paragraph allowed Homo erectus people to defend themselves for the very first time. One of their tools was fire. They might have tried to control fire, which is not a typical behavior for Homo erectus. The harnessing of fire started about 100,000 years ago. Homo genus is the fourth of the great apes. Homo sapiens are the only surviving member of the homo group. Chimpanzees, gorillas, and orangutans are all part of the homo family. Homo erectus lived between 1.8 and about 500,000 years ago. They emerged in Africa and migrated as far as Southeast Asia. Homo erectus people look very similar to modern humans. Homo erectus people didn't have the ability for complex speech. Homo people were the first people to move out of Africa and the first to use fire in a controlled way. They were the first people to make a tool industry that make hand axes. Homo erectus is not only one species it is many species of homo. They are all our ancestors too. There are Homo habilis, Homo georgicus, and Homo ergaster. There are probably many more species of homo. Well that's all for now. By Alyssa Wheeler
In simple terms, two things. One, that if a species is placed in a situation where it must either adapt or die, only the strongest of the species will adapt and survive. The weaker of the species will die. This also applies to groups of species in competition - the stronger will live, and the weaker will die, hence, "natural selection." Two, that, based on the natural selection and natural adaptation principles above, humans could not have been the way they are from the beginning of life on Earth. They evolved from another species, being an end result of a prior species' adaptation to their situation. (For the record, and for any who stumble upon this, Darwin NEVER said that we evolved from chimpanzees. He stated that humans have a common ancestor with those lovable - but dangerous - monkeys. And, as any well-rounded scientist should, he never stated that the above was fact, hence why it is a THEORY of evolution and not a LAW of evolution.)
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.
poo is so delicious i eat it every day u should try some someday
Genus species or when writing it in hand it should be Genus species, but underlined.
You need to narrow down what you're looking for, either the size of a human brain, or a Neanderthal brain, The Homo sapien (us) have evolved from the Homo Neanderthal to the point where we can be classified as sub species but going on gut instinct here, This should help you out Neandertals 1200-1750 1450 modern Homo sapiens 900-1880 1345 http://anthro.palomar.edu/homo2/mod_homo_2.htm --- Additional There is a school of thought that puts the Neanderthal as a sub species of the genus Pleistocene and a parallel evolution not a predecessor to homo-sapian.
Homo sapiens means wise man, thinking man, rational man, knowing man.It is the species name for us, humans, sometimes referred to as anatomically modern humans or AMH. Our trinomial name is homo sapiens sapiens . The skeleton taxonomy is :-Domain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum Chordata / ( sub P. Vertebrata )Class Mammalia / ( sub C. Theria )Order PrimatesFamily HominidaeGenus HomoSpecies H. sapiens / ( sub S. H.s.sapiens )You can find the full taxonomy on Wikipedia under "homo sapiens"It should be "homo sapiens". It means "wise man" and it's the Latin name of our species - i.e. humans.It combines the Latin word homo (mankind) with the adjective sapiens (wise, sensible, understanding) to describe the modern human race. The implication is that all previous forms of humankind were stupid, which is a completely false idea.It means 'wise man', or 'learned man'.
The binomial nomenclature system is the system of naming species of living organisms. To write a species name, you must know its genus and its species. So, for example, a human is Homo sapien. The genus is Homo, and the species is sapien. The genus name is always capitalized.
Homo sapiens is the binomial name. It should be italicized when in a technical article. The type specimen for this (human) species is considered to be Carl Linnaeus, the Swedish scientist who developed this naming convention. [His name was Carl Linne, but it is Latinized after obtained his degree, and for these uses.]
According to the binomial nomenclature system, a human is classified as Homo sapiens. This two-part name consists of the genus name (Homo) and the species identifier (sapiens), both of which are usually italicized. The genus name is capitalized, while the species name is written in lowercase. This system helps to standardize the naming of organisms in biology.
The correct way to write the binomial name of a human is Homo sapiens. In this notation, the genus name (Homo) is capitalized and italicized, while the species name (sapiens) is in lowercase and also italicized. When writing it in text, it should be formatted in italics or, if handwritten, underlined.
for writing any scientific name generic name and specific name is written as for example scienific name of apple is Morus Alba it means generic name is morus whic defines its genera and Alba is the species of apple so its species name is Alba generic name is written first and specific name is written later
Homo sapiens means wise man, thinking man, rational man, knowing man.It is the species name for us, humans, sometimes referred to as anatomically modern humans or AMH. Our trinomial name is homo sapiens sapiens . The skeleton taxonomy is :-Domain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum Chordata / ( sub P. Vertebrata )Class Mammalia / ( sub C. Theria )Order PrimatesFamily HominidaeGenus HomoSpecies H. sapiens / ( sub S. H.s.sapiens )You can find the full taxonomy on Wikipedia under "homo sapiens"It should be "homo sapiens". It means "wise man" and it's the Latin name of our species - i.e. humans.It combines the Latin word homo (mankind) with the adjective sapiens (wise, sensible, understanding) to describe the modern human race. The implication is that all previous forms of humankind were stupid, which is a completely false idea.It means 'wise man', or 'learned man'.
No, HeLa cells should not be considered a new species. HeLa cells are a human cell line derived from cervical cancer cells, so they are still classified as human cells.
Domain EukaryaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum Chordata Subphylum Vertebrata Class Mammalia Order Primates Family Hominidae Genus Homo Species Homo sapiens