DD'eDeN aka note/nickname/alas_my_loves wrote:
Per this paper, pre-.9ma Homo erectus had 24 pair of chromosomes, like all great apes.
Well there's two problems here, one for me.
The first is that there's no such thing as a molecular clock. The dating isn't real.
Period.
The second, and the problem for me, is that it come up against the limits to my interest and hence knowledge. Like, I'm certain that I have read that it was very
likely more than one event, this chromosome fusion. One of them, and I don't know
which one or even if it matters, could have happened and it may have made not one wit of difference. It would not have impacted breeding. It was only when BOTH
were present that there was an "Interbreeding" issue.
AND what we know for a fact, it's clearly illustrated with Mungo Man and the Chromosome 11 insert, is that a single event, a single fusion, could very well have
been common on the Pan side of the divide only for it to have been bred out.
Mu problem here is that DECADES ago I came up against "DNA Evidence" and noticed a lot of bullshit. So I never cared about it. And although it's still primarily
bullshit there are gaps in my knowledge that I sometimes regret. Like the fact that
ONE chromosome fusion really made no difference. Could it be that ONE took
root in a population and the other took root in a different population? Parallel
evolution? I haven't kept up with this crap and I certainly haven't "Studied" it so
I find that there's actual questions, regarding the DNA, which would be pertinent
but I cant answer and I don't want to embark on such a steep learning curve at this late stage...
So ONE fusion event happened. And it changed nothing. It didn't split humans and Chimps, there was no barrier to reproduction. I can't say for certain that this
was true for both (either) event or not, I think it was but to be honest I can't
even bother to do the Google just now.
So ONE fusion event. Zero separation between the Homo & Pan line. The two events might've even occurred in separate population, co existed for gazillions of years -- we don't know. But once THE TWO fusions were present in the same population they were a separate and distinct group.
So, even the ordinarily RIDICULOUS "accuracy" of molecular dating has a massive opportunity for error, in that one or both events could have occurred MILLIONS of
years ago without them making a goddamn difference, without them appearing together in one group...
Short & Sweet: Even if the fantasy of molecular dating were true, you would be dating the ages of the fusions and not necessarily the point of time when both appeared in the same individual.
They both could have appeared without them appearing together!
-- --
https://jtem.tumblr.com/post/164752659498
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
* Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)