• When we became bipedal

    From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to All on Sun Jun 30 06:38:51 2024
    Since abducted toe bipedals, like Oreopithecus, are in Africa, and
    didn't use fire, we became bipedal before we started to use fire, while
    we were still in Africa, before we moved to Europe (we started to use
    fire in Europe, 15 mya). This means that we became bipedal very early
    (before 15 mya). Why not, if we ate shellfish, and you become bipedal
    when you exit sea with shellfish in hands, that way it is possible to
    produce bipedality very early, almost immediately after we started to
    eat shellfish.

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  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to JTEM on Mon Jul 1 16:02:27 2024
    On 1.7.2024. 0:11, JTEM wrote:
     Mario Petrinovic wrote:
             Since abducted toe bipedals, like Oreopithecus, are in
    Africa, and didn't use fire, we became bipedal before we started to
    use fire, while we were still in Africa

    Or Asia, according to many.

    Or Europe, according to some.

    "How many a-priori assumptions can I shove into a statement?"

    As far as I know, apes are from Africa. So, here we have two types of
    bipedality, adducted and abducted big toe bipedality. It is obvious that abducted big toe bipedality never left Africa. So, bipedality has to be
    from Africa.

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  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to JTEM on Tue Jul 2 00:10:23 2024
    On 1.7.2024. 21:30, JTEM wrote:
     Mario Petrinovic wrote:
             As far as I know, apes are from Africa.

    We diverged from orangutans earlier than chimps or gorillas.

    According to "Science," at least when it supports an agenda,
    this means we came from Asia. Our ancestors were in Asia
    long before the common ancestor to gorillas or chimps.

    Not at all, you are inventing things. Read about "klinorhynchy" (humans, chimps, gorillas), and "airorhynchy" (orangutans). It is
    obvious, from DNA also, that chimps are our first cousins.

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  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to JTEM on Tue Jul 2 03:40:31 2024
    On 2.7.2024. 3:11, JTEM wrote:
     Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    JTEM wrote:
      Mario Petrinovic wrote:
             As far as I know, apes are from Africa.

    We diverged from orangutans earlier than chimps or gorillas.

    According to "Science," at least when it supports an agenda,
    this means we came from Asia. Our ancestors were in Asia
    long before the common ancestor to gorillas or chimps.

             Not at all, you are inventing things. Read about
    "klinorhynchy" (humans, chimps, gorillas), and "airorhynchy"
    (orangutans). It is obvious, from DNA also, that chimps are our first
    cousins.

    Which still requires that we started out in Asia, because we
    diverged from Chimps LAST, not first.

    But I disagree with the whole "Chimp" thing. I believe that the
    good Doctor is a lot closer to right than nearly everyone else
    on the planet... except for me.

    Because you don't know a sh.t, and the "good doctor" doesn't know enough.

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  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to JTEM on Tue Jul 2 17:27:12 2024
    On 2.7.2024. 5:46, JTEM wrote:
     Mario Petrinovic wrote:
             Because you don't know

    I know that the oldest supposed Chimp fossil is *Way*
    younger than humans. And the retrovirus evidence
    really does support a split around 4 million years
    ago or less. And it supports the notion that our
    ancestors weren't in Africa at the time.

    Ah, you know sooo much. Apes were the predominant species in canopy in
    Miocene, and at that time the whole life was in canopy, as far as I
    know, because the whole world was forested, there were no meadows.
    During Vallesian crisis all those Miocene apes went extinct. Except for
    our relatives and ancestors. Today apes still live on trees, SE Asian
    apes live in canopy.
    So, you are telling me what? That our ancestors survived Miocene
    carnage only to move back onto trees? No, apes survived only in rain
    forests, where people don't live. When our ancestors emerged open
    environment emerged, everybody tells you that.
    So, first you had bipedal ancestors, then what? Suddenly those bipeds
    decided to climb trees. Don't you say. Today's apes are the survived
    remnants of Miocene apes. We are bipeds, Danuvius (11.6 mya) is a biped.
    Where your brain collides with the facts?

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  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to JTEM on Wed Jul 3 23:11:06 2024
    On 2.7.2024. 23:58, JTEM wrote:
     Mario Petrinovic wrote:

             Ah, you know sooo much. Apes were the predominant species in
    canopy in Miocene, and at that time the whole

    Pure conjecture.

    I'm not disputing your right to conjecture, only noting that there
    is better conjecture... ideas that are not so reliant on a lack of information.

    I subscribe to the good Doctor's model, or a variant there of, where
    "Apes" evolved from a bipedal ancestor.

    In other words, an early Waterside (Aquatic Ape) evolved FIRST, then
    what we call apes began to split off... and this "Splitting off" was
    a process that never ended during the entire evolution, right up to
    so called "Modern Man."

    It works. It fits.

    "Da wived in jungles" does not.

    We did not evolve in the tree tops any more than we evolved on the
    savanna, i.e. "not at all."

             So, first you had bipedal ancestors, then what?

    Actually, FIRST we had waterside (Aquatic Ape)

    The good Doctor has a plausible start:  Insular Isolation

    Isolation of a group on an island is strongly associated with Insular Dwarfism, but not only is it also associated with Insular Gigantism
    but is has been argued that Gigantism precedes Dwarfism....

    FIRST they get large, because of the lack of predators AND the fact
    that they are in competition with each other... themselves.

    So they get big. Selective pressures are on "Big"

    THEN what normally happens is that these BIGGER animals with no
    natural predators exhaust all their resources. Suddenly the selective pressures are on SMALL... Dwarfism. But what if...

    What if these larger animals, instead of exhausting resources and
    growing small, what if these animals INSTEAD turned to exploiting
    the sea?  With this new high protein diet they could grow even
    larger!

    No downward pressures, they continue to experience all the selective pressures on "Bigger."

    There. We go from a fruit & nut eating tree monkey to something much
    larger, consuming protein...

    THEN we add the usual Aquatic Ape arguments on upright posture,
    bipedalism, larger brain...

    Animals are different on islands because on islands you lack predators. Do you know of any animal that evolved on islands that
    survived on mainland? Of course, not. Good Dr. Moreau's island.

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  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to JTEM on Thu Jul 4 01:39:03 2024
    On 4.7.2024. 0:37, JTEM wrote:
    On 7/3/24 5:11 PM, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
             Animals are different on islands because on islands you lack
    predators. Do you know of any animal that evolved on islands that
    survived on mainland? Of course, not. Good Dr. Moreau's island.

    We don't know where ANY animals evolved. At best we assume that it
    evolved where we found the fossil... at best.

    If we consider Gould's Punctuated Equilibrium, it's entirely plausible
    that all the animal species evolved in this manner -- isolation at
    least, regardless of whether or not the isolation stems from an
    island habitat or some other reason...

    To quote the good Doctor:

    "Isolation is the engine of evolution."

    If there's a population in the forest and one on the plains, and
    they're interbreeding like bunnies on Viagra, then the forest
    population is under exactly as much pressure to evolve in adaption
    to the plains as it is the forest... likewise for the population
    living on the plains. But isolate these groups and 100% of the
    selective pressure is on adapting to their unique environment.

    This is how humans invented Chimps, btw.

    Chimps are descended from Aquatic Ape ancestors who wandered inland
    at the horn of Africa -- following freshwater sources emptying at
    the coast.

    They were only partially isolated though, at best, with periodic
    new arrivals from the waterside group constantly re-introducing
    DNA from the parent population.

    However, as these Chimp ancestors spread west (and south) they
    were reducing the influx of fresh DNA, allowed to adapt with
    relative purity... becoming less and less like their parent AA
    population.

    This concept is known as a "Ring Species." It doesn't require a
    ring, though a ring does perfectly illustrate the situation...

    Around 4 million years ago (3.7 million years) there was a retrovirus
    that devastated Africa, the further east the worse it got.

    Either the Eurasians had no immunity at all and any that reached
    Africa were killed off, or this was a period when the crossing from
    Yemen was particularly difficult...

    It was at this point where the Chimp ancestors went from a
    distinct population to a separate species.

    Maybe "Sub Species" is more accurate, I dunno. When I say "Species"
    I mean "They banged." When I say "Sub Species" I mean "They could
    bang if they wanted to, but instead one of them ate the other."

    The main argument pro AAT is SC fat. So, you are telling me that
    chimps had SC fat? Their babies were fat, and they cried? They were
    eating shellfish? Did they have wings, and lost it?

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  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to Mario Petrinovic on Thu Jul 4 02:01:48 2024
    On 4.7.2024. 1:39, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 4.7.2024. 0:37, JTEM wrote:
    On 7/3/24 5:11 PM, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
             Animals are different on islands because on islands you lack
    predators. Do you know of any animal that evolved on islands that
    survived on mainland? Of course, not. Good Dr. Moreau's island.

    We don't know where ANY animals evolved. At best we assume that it
    evolved where we found the fossil... at best.

    If we consider Gould's Punctuated Equilibrium, it's entirely plausible
    that all the animal species evolved in this manner -- isolation at
    least, regardless of whether or not the isolation stems from an
    island habitat or some other reason...

    To quote the good Doctor:

    "Isolation is the engine of evolution."

    If there's a population in the forest and one on the plains, and
    they're interbreeding like bunnies on Viagra, then the forest
    population is under exactly as much pressure to evolve in adaption
    to the plains as it is the forest... likewise for the population
    living on the plains. But isolate these groups and 100% of the
    selective pressure is on adapting to their unique environment.

    This is how humans invented Chimps, btw.

    Chimps are descended from Aquatic Ape ancestors who wandered inland
    at the horn of Africa -- following freshwater sources emptying at
    the coast.

    They were only partially isolated though, at best, with periodic
    new arrivals from the waterside group constantly re-introducing
    DNA from the parent population.

    However, as these Chimp ancestors spread west (and south) they
    were reducing the influx of fresh DNA, allowed to adapt with
    relative purity... becoming less and less like their parent AA
    population.

    This concept is known as a "Ring Species." It doesn't require a
    ring, though a ring does perfectly illustrate the situation...

    Around 4 million years ago (3.7 million years) there was a retrovirus
    that devastated Africa, the further east the worse it got.

    Either the Eurasians had no immunity at all and any that reached
    Africa were killed off, or this was a period when the crossing from
    Yemen was particularly difficult...

    It was at this point where the Chimp ancestors went from a
    distinct population to a separate species.

    Maybe "Sub Species" is more accurate, I dunno. When I say "Species"
    I mean "They banged." When I say "Sub Species" I mean "They could
    bang if they wanted to, but instead one of them ate the other."

            The main argument pro AAT is SC fat. So, you are telling me that chimps had SC fat? Their babies were fat, and they cried? They were eating shellfish? Did they have wings, and lost it?

    Oh yes, they were bipedal, and now they are quadrumanual. First they
    didn't have lumbar curve, then they had lumbar curve, and then they lost
    it again. First they had long canines, then they lost canines, but then
    they grew it again. First they had long pelvises, then they shortened
    them, then they lengthened them again. This is not a ring, this is a
    yo-yo. And, what is even more important, not a single trace of those
    mayor changes left.
    https://youtu.be/Wb0jObZiqiI?si=bFWQwR8RA1AZ4mDl

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