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Originally posted by Byrd
Originally posted by Plugin
Originally posted by Byrd
Originally posted by amazing
reply to post by Hanslune
Fair enough, but what do you think the tallest functioning human form could be? 9 ft? And by saying that it wouldn't look human if it were taller, are we talking like much thicker bones and legs for starters, say more of a caricature of a human form would be enough to make it functional? Fascinating discussion.
About 9 feet tall. At that point (and there are a few that height) the diameter of the bones versus height and weight is simply not sufficient -- their ankles and feet develop problems and their bones often break under the weight of their body (remember, it's a lot of weight pressing down on a small area about an inch or two in diameter. They tend to die very young. Andre the Giant (at 7'4") died at the relatively young age of 50 from heart failure -- a common problem in giants.
I think this is a non-issue. Your example was a syndrome.
Just look at 'other' giant mamals in the past. They did just fine with being so large. If they adopt and grow large, everything will adapt, so stronger bones and muscles.
The large forms (I work in a paleontology lab, so I've reviewed evidence) are not the same as the smaller forms -- as Hans pointed out. A dachshund, for instance, can't be bred to be 3 feet high at the shoulder (with the same proportions -- the dog at that point would be well over 10 feet long.) The shape of lizard and crocodilian skeletons means that they can be very long but not as tall as a horse (because their legs aren't under them, but are splayed to the side of their bodies.)
As Hans said, if you managed to get a human that was 12 feet tall, changes in the skeleton would make them look not-very-human.
.... species of modern mamals where appearing, but they where very very tiny, basicly the environment was kinda toxic back then which did not support normal sized animals and so you had in the past also an enviroment which was very very healthy basicly and so mamals grew like giants.
First... not all species of mammals are large -- in fact, most species are much smaller than humans. Second, environmental changes meant the environment was "toxic" at various times for various types of mammals. We still have giants today like the grizzly bear, elephants, pandas, giraffes, and so forth.
but for me it would be just rather odd you didnt had a giant race of humans somewhere at some time just like most from modern day mamals which had giants versions in the past.
There are quite a lot of mammals which don't have giant forms, including mice, shrews, dogs, wolves (dire wolf was actually smaller than a Great Dane), horses (today's horse is the largest that the species has ever been), sheep, goats, platypuses, ocelots, tigers, leopards, gazelles, many breeds of deer, otters, and so on and so forth.
Originally posted by Byrd
There are quite a lot of mammals which don't have giant forms, including mice, shrews, dogs, wolves (dire wolf was actually smaller than a Great Dane), horses (today's horse is the largest that the species has ever been), sheep, goats, platypuses, ocelots, tigers, leopards, gazelles, many breeds of deer, otters, and so on and so forth.
Originally posted by MaxSteiner
reply to post by Harte
I think you're being a bit hard on the Chinese pyramids there!
They aren't mounds of earth, they're pyramids of pressed earth covered in mounds of earth - quite a different thing - we actually use pressed earth in the modern epoch sometimes it's stronger than concrete!
Originally posted by Plugin
Most extinct but giant relatives of modern mammals where just pretty much in the same proportions! just look at the giant deer, camel (only just recently found), crocodile or even the great white shark which was once Megalodon, it was just a giant white shark, it looked exactly the same only way way bigger.
They where in pretty much the same proportions! but at least 2x bigger then today's still alive versions.
So why wouldn't a human get 2 or even 3 times as big when many different mamals did just fine, with no difference in the way they looked (the same proportions), only bigger > giant versions.
Originally posted by Harte
Originally posted by Plugin
Most extinct but giant relatives of modern mammals where just pretty much in the same proportions! just look at the giant deer, camel (only just recently found), crocodile or even the great white shark which was once Megalodon, it was just a giant white shark, it looked exactly the same only way way bigger.
They where in pretty much the same proportions! but at least 2x bigger then today's still alive versions.
So why wouldn't a human get 2 or even 3 times as big when many different mamals did just fine, with no difference in the way they looked (the same proportions), only bigger > giant versions.
Giant camels, deer, crocodiles, sharks (living in water makes giantism much less difficult) etc. were not the same species as today's camels, deer, crocodiles, sharks etc.
Looked at from this perspective, then, there's no reason at all that species in our genus (Homo) couldn't grow 2 or 3 times the size of other members of the genus.
And, in fact, we have. H. Sapiens and a few other members of the genus Homo are 2 or three times the size of the other species in our genus. Just like the camels, deer, etc. in your example.
Harte
Originally posted by Plugin
Most extinct but giant relatives of modern mammals where just pretty much in the same proportions! just look at the giant deer, camel (only just recently found), crocodile or even the great white shark which was once Megalodon, it was just a giant white shark, it looked exactly the same only way way bigger.
Of course when you breed a dog, it's not natural, we made many different dogs with interbreeding with different species to make them small or bigger and of course this way you will reach a limit with how big/tall or small/tiny.
The last mammoths died out just 3600 years ago! (at least untill found some bones, before that they thought differently/not possible) (io9.com...) basicly just giant versions of today's still living elephants.
So why not some giant race of humans somewhere, where only myths/great stories remain.edit on 8-5-2013 by Plugin because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by Plugin
So why did megalodon if it's not the same specie as the white shark looks excactly the same! (only bigger)
but like for example an indonesier is the same specie as a german (human) but they got more difference between them, then those 2 sharks?
How big the change would be that the great white shark would apear as an exact copy of Megalodon many milions years later - only smaller? that change would be how big?
Originally posted by Byrd
They're the same genus. Just like lions and tigers are in the same genus but are different species.