The two types are Dna, and fossils
Indirect evidence from Seismic Waves, and direct evidence from rock samples.
It was previously thought that the early stages of the human embryo were similar to those found in other types of creatures (Haeckel's diagrams), but it has now been shown that this is not quite conclusive (google "Haeckel diagram fraud"). There is still a lot of research going on in this area, and the data is constantly changing.
Blood Semen Urine DNA Hair Fingerprints Bones Bitemarks
limbs wings legs arms and flippers
The Trace Evidence Unit (TEU) identify and compare trace materials/evidence of specific types that could have been transferred when a violent crime was committed. This is usually in the form of human/animal hair, fibres, fabric, rope, dirt, feather, grass e.t.c.
The two types are Dna, and fossils
The two types are Dna, and fossils
Fossil evidence, such as transitional forms showing intermediate characteristics between species, and genetic evidence, like similarities in DNA sequences among related species, both support the occurrence of evolution.
Accept fossil evidence, anatomical evidence, molecular evidence
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Morphological evidence.Genetic and genomic evidence.Geographical evidence.
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Quantitive evidence is evidence that has to do with numbers. For example. the magnitude of an earthquake the time the earthquake occurred and the length of the earthquake are all types of quantitive evidence
The four types of evidence that support the theory of evolution are fossil records showing transitional forms, similarities in embryology and anatomy across species (homology), biogeography (distribution of species around the world), and genetic evidence such as DNA comparisons that show relationships between different species.
The three types of evidence that suggest organisms are related through common descent are anatomical evidence (similarities in body structures), molecular evidence (similarities in DNA sequences), and fossil evidence (transitional forms showing evolutionary changes over time).
Scientists use various types of evidence to support evolution, including fossil records showing transitional forms, the distribution of species around the world, comparative anatomy and embryology, genetic similarities among organisms, and observed instances of natural selection. These different lines of evidence provide a strong basis for understanding the process of evolution.
Physiological similarities suggest the species evolved from the same ancestor.