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originally posted by: luthier
a reply to: Byrd
Thats true what are you getting at?
Are you saying ooa does not include the admixtures and study the entire genus of "homo'?
originally posted by: Byrd
originally posted by: luthier
a reply to: Byrd
Thats true what are you getting at?
Are you saying ooa does not include the admixtures and study the entire genus of "homo'?
No. I'm saying it only applies to the genus Homo. Not Australopithecus, not the fossil that the OP mentions. The story of how we got to be the genus Homo and specifically Homo sapiens is evolution... not "Out Of Africa."
originally posted by: luthier
I was contemplating the migration patterns that lead to human beings as well as the migratory pattern of humans.
originally posted by: Byrd
originally posted by: luthier
I was contemplating the migration patterns that lead to human beings as well as the migratory pattern of humans.
Aye. It appeared you were confusing the two, as they're actually different things. Only the migratory pattern of humans is the "out of Africa." The migration patterns that led to human beings isn't.
originally posted by: luthier
originally posted by: Byrd
originally posted by: luthier
I was contemplating the migration patterns that lead to human beings as well as the migratory pattern of humans.
Aye. It appeared you were confusing the two, as they're actually different things. Only the migratory pattern of humans is the "out of Africa." The migration patterns that led to human beings isn't.
Oh OK. I wasn't. The homo genus did not arrive on a spaceship (at least that hasn't been found) so evolution of primates is part of physical anthro (paleoanthropology).
My point with saying primates started in China an North America was just saying its interesting that the "first stage" of our evolution as primates started far away from where the genus homo would begin. [/QUOTE]
Oh! Okay! Yes, we agree. I think I had you confused with someone who wasn't aware of continental drift and the impact that had on the position of the continents and the fossil record!
I think the evolutionary process as an ongoing affair is immensely complex and ooa to the average lay person gives the impression we came out of Africa the way we are today.
In my case I went to school over twenty five years ago so ooa was not quite the same as it is now. The genetic and fossil record is more complete and the acceptance of admixtures has muddied what was called replacement theory back then. Since then we have found there was greater overlap than first thought.
None of it makes ooa not a sound hypothesis just saying there may be confusion about what ooa is in terms of how broad the scope of the hypothesis is. It's more than just we came out of the Africa.
Ha! Yes, agreed. And yeah, it's been a much longer time for me since I had my last biology class (though working as a volunteer fossil preparator for a museum has given me a much better understanding of evolution.)
originally posted by: luthier
What I am saying is the journey and path humans took is every bit as responsible for what we are as where they originated.