I'd imagine, it looks a bit like a whale. LOL
no a beluga looks like a dolphin but it`s not it is an ancestor of whales
lizard The common ancestor of all modern tetrapods looked like a fish that had nubs the became limbs through evolution.
blackouts were more common in the UK but brownouts were more frequent in Australia i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales i like whales
Modern monkeys are not the ancestors of modern humans. however, animals that we would consider to be ape-like, but which are now extinct, were the ancestors of both modern humans and modern monkeys.
One ancestor is an instrument called the serpent.
It's been estimated that 75% of mammals are now extinct, so it's unlikely that a common ancestor still exists as a modern species. However, if we saw a common ancestor we'd probably say it looked like a shrew.
vestigial structures.
The closest spies of dog to a wolf is the chiwawa so my opinian is that the most recent spieces to a dog is the chiwawa
I eard my friend told u can see the oldest to newest anime in redtube.com
Answer 1Whales first evolved roughly 54 million years ago.Homo sapiens (modern humans) evolved roughly 4 million years ago.Answer 2Whales and humans share a common ancestry in the clade of Boreoeutheria, dating back some 65 million years. By my best estimate, that's when the lineages leading to modern humans and modern whales went their separate ways.Modern whales, like the blue whale, form a diverse group of species, just like modern apes, like the humans, form a diverse group of species. On a geological timescale, there may not be much difference between the emergence of the modern species of whale from their basal clades and the emergence of modern species of ape from their basal clades.Comparing the emergence of modern humans to the emergence of whales isn't really a useful comparison. It's like comparing the emergence of vehicles to the emergence of the Audi A3.
Most whales like humpback whales, sperm whales, and blue whales eat krill or plankton. Killer whales eat penguins, seals, or turtles.
No, though cows and whales come from a common ancestor being the Pakicetus. Cows are "sisters" to hippos, and both of these species are "cousins" to whales. Cows, like all other ungulates, have their evolution much farther back on the evolutionary tree than whales do. Whales came from mammals that went from being terrestrial to oceanic in a matter of 8 million years. See the related link below for more info.