There are a few animals common to today's ocean whose relatives were also around 470 million years ago. Sharks are a good example.
Today's relatives of Crinoids include sea urchins, starfish, sea cucumbers, and brittle stars. Typically, if it looks like a flower, it is a relative of the crinoids.
Not directly; Humans evolved from an ape-like ancestor who lived around 7 million years ago. These ape-like creatures shared a common ancestor with monkeys who lived around 20 to 30 million years ago.
The difference between a common animal virus and a retrovirus is that a retrovirus only contains RNA while a common animal virus will have DNA or RNA.
Two common units of measuring dosage for an animal are milligrams and milliliters.
Because it is an animal, and not the name of an animal such as "George".
We are evolutionary relatives. We shared a last common ancestor with New World Monkeys around 40 million years ago and a last common ancestor with Old World Monkeys around 25 million years ago.
40 million around the world 70 percent in Africa
They died out around sixtyfive million years ago- but I'd imagine they'd be pretty common before then.
Maybe around 5 million, but no more.
Yes, it is a common noun. It can also be an adjective.
We can't answer this question more specifically given that you are anonymous. However, all humans had a common ancestor c. 100,000 years ago. Their next closest relatives are the chimpanzee and the bonobo, which split off from humans c. 5 million years ago and from one another c. 1.5 million years ago. In descending order of relatedness after the chimpanzee are the gorilla, the orangutan, the gibbons, Old World monkeys and New World monkeys. These are your relatives.
an endangered animal is an animal that is almost extinct. a common animal is an animal that has lot's of its kind alive.
A group of relatives, a family with the same ancestors.
What do you mean with other common objects? A million is not a "common object"; it's a number.
It is a bird called the "Common Murre."Kayla
No, the term 'your relatives' is a noun phrase made up of the plural, common noun 'relatives' described by the possessive adjective 'your'.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing.Examples (proper nouns in bold):The Hamiltons are your relatives.Are your relatives are Canadians?We will pick up your relatives at the American Airlines' terminal.
the plant and animal both have a nucleus, that is what they have in common