Yes, there's an encyclopedia's worth of social studies and historical data (some of which might just surprise people), but there's also downright fascinating science in the form of biology and
common human ancestry.
Not exact matches
In this view, we
humans have
common ancestry not only with monkeys but also with trees and fungi and all other living things by a process of natural chance.
Modern
humans, Homo sapiens, are the latest link in a chain of
ancestry that stretches back 5 to 7 million years to a
common ancestor with chimpanzees and bonobos, humanity's two closest living relatives.
The skeleton of a man who lived 2,330 years ago in the southernmost tip of Africa tells us about ourselves as
humans, and throws some light on our earliest
common genetic
ancestry.
Studies on sea urchins provided the missing link because they have a protein with elements
common to those in both
humans and insects and reveal a
common ancestry hundreds of millions of years ago.
Humans are a part of nature and linked to other organisms by a
common ancestry, Leopold has argued.
Researchers found that
human, fly, and worm genomes have a number of key genomic processes in
common, reflecting their shared
ancestry...
«Russell Thomson, Jonathan K. Pritchard, Peidong Shen, Peter J. Oefner, and Marcus W. Feldman, «Recent
common ancestry of
human Y chromosomes: Evidence from DNA sequence data,» Proc.