We are all related to each other! We are all family!

Biologists have classified us as a human ape, a mammal and a vertebrate animal. We have a common ancestor with the monkeys, but even with the fruit fly we share 60% of our DNA”
No, people don't descend from monkeys” That's the amazing answer from biologist Patrick Reygel. Is Professor Reygel a creationist, totally tapped off his fate or does he have the perfect scientific explanation for this? He opens the UHasselt skull cabinet and delves into history for several million years. And hopla, yet another persistent myth debunked!
Who was our oldest ancestor?
Planet Earth is about 45 billion years old. For the first 700 million years, there was no life to be found on our planet. Life only came about 38 billion years ago. It didn't suggest much yet: unicellular microorganisms. In that same period and in the same primordial soup, our primeval ancestor (or mother) arose, or the last universal common ancestor. Scientists lovingly call it LUCA, short for last universal common ancestor.
The greatest family tree of man ever gives a detailed picture of our evolution . Charles Darwin's theory of evolution inspired the Dutch researcher Eugène Dubois, who was born in Eijsden in Limburg in 1858. He became fascinated by the idea that an intermediate form must have lived between monkey and man, also known as the missing link, the missing link.
Scientists figure out which group of animals evolved first
Who was first, the sponge or the rib jellyfish? One of the two groups is the very first animal split from other animal species by evolving separately — but which of the two, that has been a mystery for a long time. A new research now pleads for the rib jellyfish. Scientists on both sides of the debate praise the study for providing clarification, although it is not yet seen as the final answer.
First complete skull discovered from Lucy's immediate ancestor
Researchers have a human skull of the first time in Ethiopia Australopithecus anamensis unearthed. A wonderful find. So far, only a few jawbones and teeth were known of this hominin. Which, incidentally, came in handy when identifying the species. “It's good to finally be able to give the name a face,” says researcher Stephanie Melillo.
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