its like
- maliit ang ngipin
- mahina
- mabagal
- Hindi kayang ipagtangol ang sarili
yan poh.... im remark garcia
my Japanese name is kyou kazuichi.... thank's...
paano nag kakaiba ang ramapithecus at dryopithecus
they lived in the desert after monkeys
the geologist name mark gerald
arkeologist
The scientific name of Ramapithecus is now considered invalid. It was originally classified as a hominin species, but subsequent research and reclassification have led scientists to view it as more closely related to the orangutan lineage.
Ramapithecus had a body size similar to a chimpanzee, with long arms and a relatively short stature. It had a combination of ape-like and human-like features, such as large canines like apes but a more upright posture similar to humans. Ramapithecus also had thick tooth enamel, suggesting a diet that included tough plant material.
Pat Shipman has written: 'Taking Wing' -- subject(s): Flight, Birds, Archaeopteryx 'Reconstructing the paleoecology and taphonomic history of Ramapithecus wickeri at Fort Ternan, Kenya' -- subject(s): Paleontology, Ramapithecus 'Taking wing' -- subject(s): Flight, Birds, Archaeopteryx
Ramapithecus is considered a genus of extinct primates that lived in the Miocene epoch about 14 million years ago. Its fossils were found in areas like India and Africa. Ramapithecus is believed to have been a distant ancestor of modern apes and humans, but its exact placement in the evolutionary tree is still debated among scientists.
Ramapithecus, an extinct hominid, is characterized by its small brain size, ape-like dental features, and bipedal postcranial traits. It is believed to be one of the earliest ancestors of modern humans.
Hominids evolved from a group of primates known as hominoids around 14 million years ago. Hominids include humans and their closest extinct relatives, such as Australopithecus and Homo species.
teoryang ebolusyon ng Tao (Charles Darwin) Lima ang sumusunod: ramapithecus- austrolopithecus- homo sapiens- homo habilis- homo erectus- please give the description please
Human evolution is necessarily part of the overall evolution of species, since without evolution of species there could be no evolution of humans. On the other hand, from a religious perspective, evolution could be true for lesser species, but not humans. In fact this was a nineteenth century proposition, because its proponents believed that God created man in his image. This proposition no longer has significant support and those who deny the fact of human evolution seek to disprove evolution altogether.Although we may not be able to say who first defined evolution as the means by which new species arise, we do know that early pioneers of evolution theories include Jean-Baptiste Pierre Antoine de Monet, Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire and Lamarck. Charles Darwin (1809-1892) was the first to recognise the role of natural selection in evolution. He defined the process by which evolution occurs as being natural selection, in his Theory of Evolution by Natural Selection.If we look at the other primates, we can see that the great apes are similar in some ways to humans, and similar in other ways to monkeys. In fact, scientists are able to say that humans and chimpanzees evolved from a common ancestor some seven million years ago. Fossil evidence is inconclusive in proving this link, but it can be shown from DNA analysis of modern chimpanzees and humans.Or species is known as Homo sapiens. Current theories say that we evolved from our immediate ancestors, Homo erectusin Africa some 200,000 years ago. However, recent finds of Homo erectus in Asia reopen the possibility that the evolution of Homo sapiens may have been to some extent multi-regional.Neanderthal man was a close relation to modern humans, and occupied parts of Europe and western Asia from abour 220,000 years ago until perhaps 30,000 years ago, co-existing with modern humans for some of that time. They were at once believed to be a subspecies of Homo sapiens, but most scientists now believe that they were a distinct species. Scientists also dispute whether the Neanderthals may have interbred with modern humans, and whether any offspring would have been fertile.The probable ancestor of Homo erectus is Homo habilis, an even more ancient human species that lived about 2 million to 1.5 million years ago in Africa.Earlier species that may have been our ancestors, or were at least related to our ancestors include Australopithecus boisei. Australopithecus robustus, Australopithecus africanus, AustraIopithecus afarensis, Kenyanthropus platyops, Orrorin tugenensis, Ramapithecus and Sahelanthropus tchadensis. Sahelanthropus tchadensislived seven million years ago.