there are different species of creatures in the world but why not a species of human?
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I am not sure about this answer but I think that humans are evolved from only one forefather but creatures had many forefathers so they are different from each other
Chinmoy240:
Please mark it brainliest
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We humans have left a nasty mark on the Earth, no doubt. We’ve poisoned waterways, incinerated forests, and poured greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. We've critically endangered some species by demolishing huge swaths of their natural habitat, and greedily hunted others to extinction.
Many recent books, notably Elizabeth Kolbert's The Sixth Extinction, have documented the vanished species and explored the idea that we might be entering a new period of human-caused mass extinction — the kind of biological annihilation so colossal, so widespread, that it leaves an obvious scar on the fossil record. As Kolbert put in a recent conversation with Vox’s David Roberts, “the idea that we would eliminate many of the other species on Earth, including our closest relatives (we’re in the process of eliminating the great ape), is a pretty awful legacy.”
Many recent books, notably Elizabeth Kolbert's The Sixth Extinction, have documented the vanished species and explored the idea that we might be entering a new period of human-caused mass extinction — the kind of biological annihilation so colossal, so widespread, that it leaves an obvious scar on the fossil record. As Kolbert put in a recent conversation with Vox’s David Roberts, “the idea that we would eliminate many of the other species on Earth, including our closest relatives (we’re in the process of eliminating the great ape), is a pretty awful legacy.”
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