No. Humans evolved from a common ancestor we have with today's "great" apes (chimpanzees, orangutans, gorillas). This is proven specifically for human evolution by ERVs and the fused chromosome #2.
Brain coral is just an example of Pareidolia... the phenomena of the human mind to see patterns in things that aren't really anything (like religious images in toast, faces in mountain sides, etc).
no, the octopus has one brain inside its mantle.
The brain's hypothalamus is known to have evolved in humans to enable them to cope with sudden life-threatening emergencies.
Apparently, the brain growth associated with walking made the difference. Opposable thumbs also help.
actually, believe it or not, i doesn't matter what size the brain is. It matters how many crevices are located on the brain.
If they eat enough of it fast enough, it is physically possible for a cat to get a brain freeze the way humans do.
The brain's hypothalamus is known to have evolved in humans to enable them to cope with sudden life-threatening emergencies.
Humans.
It evolved from the Old English word, "braegen." Because it called the brain
nope infact research shows that an elephants brain is actually the size of a peanut and our brain is the size of both our fists put together so our brains our actually larger than a giant elephants appearance does not matter when it comes to brain size.:)
No, it's been proven that when a person isn't doing anything, the brain is actually using at least 30 percent of their brain
Yes; humans are primates.
In its simplest forms and before there were any modern humans early technologies for obtaining and preparing foods improved our ancestor's diet, permitting the support of the large brains of modern humans as the brain evolved to help develop even better technologies to do those and many other things.