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Some key differences between human and ape skeletons include the shape of the pelvis (humans have a bowl-shaped pelvis for bipedal walking, while apes have a flatter pelvis for quadrupedal movement), the position of the foramen magnum (the large opening on the skull where the spinal cord enters; it is positioned more centrally in humans for upright posture), and the curvature of the spine (humans have an S-shaped spine for walking upright, while apes have a C-shaped spine for quadrupedal movement).
No, ape and human DNA are not the same. While there are similarities due to a shared evolutionary history, there are significant differences in the DNA sequences of apes and humans that account for their distinct characteristics.
A baby ape is called an infant or a baby ape.
Australopithecus afarensis is unique for their combination of both ape-like and human-like features, such as a small brain size, human-like teeth, and ape-like arms and legs. They were bipedal, meaning they could walk on two feet, which was a key step in human evolution. Lucy, a famous Australopithecus afarensis fossil, provided valuable evidence of their bipedal locomotion.
No, humans descended from ape-like ancestors. Evidence suggests that the human line split from the first gorillas around four to eight million years ago.
An ape tree would last longer if your talking about growing it.