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New species of ancient human unearthed in the Philippines
By Lizzie WadeApr. 10, 2019 , 1:00 PM
A strange new species may have joined the human family. Human fossils found in a cave on Luzon, the largest island in the Philippines, include tiny molars suggesting their owners were small; curved finger and toe bones hint that they climbed trees. Homo luzonensis, as the species has been christened, lived some 50,000 to 80,000 years ago, when the world hosted multiple archaic humans, including Neanderthals and Denisovans, and when H. sapiens may have been making its first forays into Southeast Asia.
originally posted by: Somekindofwizard
From all this new information that's come out in the last ten years it seems as if 100,000 years ago was like something out of a fantasy novel. All these different types of human like creatures running around. The question is we're these groups isolated to the point of no contact with the others. We know in the case of Neanderthals and Denisovans there was contact and interbreeding but what about the others. Maybe our fascination with these kinds of stories with different groups of intelligent beings is some kind of a shared history.
originally posted by: IgnoranceIsntBlisss
No pictures. Not even in the article.
The earliest Homo sapiens probably had the cognitive capability to invent Sputnik, but they didn’t yet have the history of invention or a need for those things.
The Neanderthals…were complex beings and talented users of the landscape they lived in: a far cry, indeed, from the brutish image with which generations of cartoonists have endowed them. But they left no evidence of the creative, innovative spark that is so conspicuous a characteristic of our own kind. […].Cro-Magnons…there’s no doubt that they were us. Physically they were indistinguishable from living Homo sapiens; and, in its richness and complexity, the surviving material evidence of their lives indicates unequivocally that they were our intellectual equals…The first modern people arrived in Europe equipped with all of the cognitive skills that we possess today…[with] the tendency toward innovation and cultural diversification that is so fundamental a characteristic of Homo sapiens–and so foreign to all earlier human species.
We know they [modern human beings] emerged in Africa first, and were confined there until perhaps 50,000 years ago when they moved from Africa and replaced other kinds of people elsewhere, like the Neanderthals from Europe… in probably just a few thousand years… I’m interested in trying to find out why that happened…[The best explanation] is that there was genetic or genomic change in Africa. It’s not a popular idea. To some people it almost seems like some kind of intellectual Nazism– like you’re suggesting people before 50,000 years ago were not human. I’m not. We know that over the course of evolution, there’s been a huge amount of genetic change. We start with people with brains one-third the size of ours, and then we have us. That’s not population increase, that’s genes.
originally posted by: spiritualarchitect
Yes, evolution is bogus. Too may holes in it for it to fly. All these early human types had sex with each other. Must have been good times. But it caused rapid diversity that evolution cannot account for.
originally posted by: punkinworks10
That is literally evolution in progress.
They found molars and some finger/toe bones. How does that suffice to identify a new species? It's rash science. They assume evolution did it, and try to fit every observation into that narrative. Even when samples are insufficient. It shows how much they have to grasp at straws to try to keep the dead-end theory alive.
originally posted by: Ligyron
They assumed evolution did it? What would have done it? 9 feet tall Aliens from outer Space? Got any proof of that?
originally posted by: cooperton
originally posted by: punkinworks10
That is literally evolution in progress.
They found molars and some finger/toe bones. How does that suffice to identify a new species? It's rash science. They assume evolution did it, and try to fit every observation into that narrative. Even when samples are insufficient. It shows how much they have to grasp at straws to try to keep the dead-end theory alive.