When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Gorilla - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gorilla

    Like humans, gorillas have individual fingerprints. [33] [34] Their eye colour is dark brown, framed by a black ring around the iris. Gorilla facial structure is described as mandibular prognathism, that is, the mandible protrudes farther out than the maxilla.

  3. Chelicerae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chelicerae

    Both pseudoscorpions and harvestmen have additional structures on their chelicerae that are used for grooming (papillae in pseudoscorpions, cheliceral teeth in Opiliones). [1] In Paratrechalea , males and females have shown to have a chelicerae dimorphism, because the chelicerae is used as a mating signal for females.

  4. Human skeletal changes due to bipedalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_skeletal_changes_due...

    Ape skeletons. A display at the Museum of Zoology, University of Cambridge.From left to right: Bornean orangutan, two western gorillas, chimpanzee, human. The evolution of human bipedalism, which began in primates approximately four million years ago, [1] or as early as seven million years ago with Sahelanthropus, [2] [3] or approximately twelve million years ago with Danuvius guggenmosi, has ...

  5. Mountain gorilla - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mountain_gorilla

    The mountain gorilla (Gorilla beringei beringei) is one of the two subspecies of the eastern gorilla.It is listed as endangered by the IUCN as of 2018. [2]There are two populations: One is found in the Virunga volcanic mountains of Central/East Africa, within three National Parks: Mgahinga, in southwest Uganda; Volcanoes, in northwest Rwanda; and Virunga, in the eastern Democratic Republic of ...

  6. Primate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primate

    The Old World species are divided into apes and monkeys depending on the number of cusps on their molars: monkeys have four, apes have five [72] - although humans may have four or five. [78] The main hominid molar cusp ( hypocone ) evolved in early primate history, while the cusp of the corresponding primitive lower molar (paraconid) was lost.

  7. Amblypygi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amblypygi

    Amblypygids generally do not feed for a period of time before, during, and after molting. Like other arachnids, an amblypygid will molt several times during its life. [ 6 ] Molting is done while hanging from the underside of a horizontal surface in order to use gravity to assist in separating the old exoskeleton from the animal.

  8. Eastern gorilla - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_gorilla

    It has a flat nose with large nostrils. The face, hands, feet and breast are bald. The fur is mainly black, but adult males have a silvery "saddle" on their back. When the gorilla gets older, the hair on the saddle of the back becomes white, much like the gray hair of elderly people. This is why the older males are called silverbacks. Grauer's ...

  9. Western lowland gorilla - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_lowland_gorilla

    The western lowland gorilla (Gorilla gorilla gorilla) is one of two Critically Endangered subspecies of the western gorilla (Gorilla gorilla) that lives in montane, primary and secondary forest and lowland swampland in central Africa in Angola (Cabinda Province), Cameroon, Central African Republic, Republic of the Congo, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Equatorial Guinea and Gabon.