Posted on 03/31/2012 11:33:41 AM PDT by SunkenCiv
Researcher Stephanie Melillo holds the fourth metatarsal of the Burtele partial foot right after its discovery. The team found eight bones from the front half of a right foot. Such hominin fossils are rare, since they are fragile and are often destroyed in the face of carnivores and decay. ][CREDIT: The Cleveland Museum of Natural History. Photo courtesy: Yohannes Haile-Selassie]
hitherto unknown species = “Send Grant Money !!”
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GGG managers are SunkenCiv, StayAt HomeMother & Ernest_at_the_Beach | |
To all -- please ping me to other topics which are appropriate for the GGG list.The 3.4-million-year-old fossils were discovered in 2009...That means they're 3,400,003 years old now. |
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I only gave up treehouses because there aren’t any trees on my property strong enough to support them. Rope ladder maintenance is another consideration . . .
;’D
What I’d like to know is how many evolutionary events define the transition from this “pre-human species” to the human species.
And what were the specifics of the genetic mutations forming these evolutionary events?
Some people in Santa Cruz are still living in tree houses.
oh that makes it so much clearer
Not that really does make it clearer....they came out of ‘tree houses’ for the Colonel’s finest. :)
Looks like a bone from modern day man both in size and structure. I would doubt that this bone was part of a foot with opposable great toes.
It’s all speculation. A clear fossil record exists for everything but the evolution of man as described by those who believe we descended from apes.
It’s like global warming. The evidence does not support it but they latch onto any event they can or distort the facts to fit their belief.
“send grant money”
So correct. It’s about grant money and supports the attack on religion and promotion of socialism.
Oh hell, I threw those chicken bones down a few months back when I was hiking through Ethiopia. A fellow has to eat something.
Be nice.
I used to spend some pleasurable time here in the mid-late 60's.
Based on some of the other replies, apparently those tree houses have broadband.
Once upon a time, long, long ago..........
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neanderthal_anatomy
That's one of Wiki's pages dealing with Neanderthal anatomy. It shows a mockup of a complete Neanderthal skeleton with normal looking feet which are probably just concocted from minimal real evidence as usual, and then an image of a Neanderthal footprint which is presumably real and a caption describing it as from the Natural History Museum in Prague:
THAT is pretty obviously an ape's footprint. You could view that image as an artifact of a human-like Neanderthal having once had a pet gorilla; I view it as an artifact of people looking at something the wrong way.
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