Selene is the oldest known human mutant. Functionally immortal, her millennia-long life is attributed to her ability to drain the life essence from other beings to extend her own existence indefinitely.
Namor. Namor is commonly referred to as "Marvel's first mutant." He may not be as old as ancients like Selene and Apocalypse, but he does have the distinction of being the first mutant character to actually appear in a comic book (1939's Marvel Comics #1, to be specific).
But in X-Force it was revealed that Selene the Black Queen is a mutant who predates Apocalypse. She was born in 15000 BC which is around 12,000 years before Apocalypse.
Officially, Namor the Sub-Mariner is considered the first mutant superhero whom Marvel Comics ever published, debuting in 1939.
Atum, son of Gaea, is considered alternatively as the first of the new gods or as an Elder God.
The Supreme Mutant, or simply referred to as, the Father of all Mutants was a extraordinary and highly powerful mutant that was said by some; to be the highest and most powerful mutant that has ever existed. He is been called many things among which are: The "One", the Father of mutants, the "Great One", etc.
Like having a skeleton coated in lead, the metal leeches into Logan's body over time. It takes years to have a major effect, but by 2029, the year “Logan” is set, the adamantium has so weakened Logan that he's aging at a normal rate and struggling to heal himself after injuries.
Able to regenerate from any and all injuries, including death, Craig Hollis is unable to die and therefore dubs himself Mister Immortal, vowing to fight crime. With the two-dimensional Flatman, they form the Great Lakes Avengers in the Wisconsin area, despite lacking official Avengers sanction.
Through the personality of The Legion (the name given to Personality #5, which claims to be Legion's "real me"), he can warp time and reality. Magik nicknamed this personality the "God-Mutant."
Jean Grey was the only Class Five mutant ever met by Charles Xavier (which implies Magneto and Pyro are Class Four), and her potential was stated to be limitless.
Why were no mutants being born? You can certainly piece together the truth from what's in the film: the genetically modified corn syrup crops that Logan is shown earlier in the film have been altered – possibly by Zander Rice – to supress the mutant gene.
The Oldest Mutant There Is
(A later comic, 2001's Origin, would declare that Wolverine — real name James Howlett — was actually born in 1885, meaning that he was a sprightly 56 years old at the time of the X-Men story. Comic book time is a weird thing, needless to say.)
Users. Wolverine: Because of his healing factor, Wolverine is able to live longer than normal and show no signs of aging until a later period of time. X-23: Being Wolverine's clone, X-23 possesses the same healing factor and therefore has the same ability.
Together, Byrne and Claremont came up with Wolverine being about 60 years old and having served in World War II after escaping from Sabretooth, who was about 120 years old.
Director James Gunn broke a million hearts today when he confirmed that, yes, Groot dies at the end of the first Guardians of the Galaxy.
Zuras is the eldest of the Eternals, a direct progenitor of the Celestials. He is also the father of Thena, and a warmonger against the Deviants. Humans have attributed him to Greek god, Zeus.
That's a commonly asked question. The Marvel universe, beginning in the comics and extending into movies and television, is replete with gods and god-like characters. Except for a tongue-in-cheek reference by Captain America in Marvel's The Avengers, our Triune God does not appear in these films.
It's official: Hugh Jackman is coming back as Logan, as has been previously confirmed by the actor and Ryan Reynolds.
Meaning having been born in 1832, in a perfect world without Transigen and the Adamantium skeleton, Wolverine would have lived to the year 2298 at the age of 466. That's a long time, so much more longer than any of us. Really puts our smaller life timeline in perspective.
Zander Rice (Richard E. Grant) concocted a formula that would suppress the mutant gene. Unfortunately, his formula—present in the genetically-altered corn syrup his company was mass manufacturing—nearly wiped out the mutants instead.
In Mark Waid's History of the Marvel Universe #3, Marvel has finally officially revealed who the most powerful mutant in the universe is. And no it's not Wolverine, Jean Grey or Professor X. It's Franklin Richards.
Likewise, it is rare but possible for mutant parents to have human children, termed "baseline" by characters within the Marvel Universe. Some baseline humans are genetically predisposed towards having mutant descendants such as the Guthrie family (see Cannonball, Husk, and Icarus).