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Old 03-28-2002, 03:11 AM   #181
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Kosh:
Quote:
What if the picture you want is not at a valid URL? Ie, it's just on your local machine. Is there no way to reference it then?
You have to get it a valid URL, otherwise you're out of luck.
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Old 03-28-2002, 03:57 AM   #182
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Quote:
Ron: As to the teeth array, it is now believed that the mandibular structure of Australopithecus afarensis look very similar to Ramapithecus, which is recognised as being in the orangutan class.

Oolon: References please. But meanwhile, concentrate on what you can see of the jaw [pics of orangutan and afarensis skulls]. Now please define ‘very similar’.

Ron: Ok, first the question of how Ramapithecus is mmore connected ot orangutans, and more closely related to ape than man...check out: [bunch of links about Ramapithecus being closer to orangs]
Sorry, I guess it wasn't entirely clear. However, yeah thanks, I know Ramapithecus is in the orang-utan lineage. I’ve known it since I first read Gribbin and Cherfas’s The Monkey Puzzle back in 1985. In fact, I’m sure I’ve posted about this as an example of a paradigm shift, where the ‘molecular clock’, disbelieved for quite a while by palaeontologists, was gradually confirmed by the fossils, and knocked about 10 million years off the human-ape divergence.

So the questions (still) are:

1) References please for “the mandibular structure of Australopithecus afarensis look[ing] very similar to Ramapithecus”. Which palaeoanthropologist or anatomist has ever said so?

2) You can decide for yourself. After looking at “the mandibular structure” of the afarensis and orang skulls above, and/or these mandibles:

Ramapithecus (Lufengpithecus) lufengensis



Australopithecus afarensis (composite reconstruction)



... please define ‘very similar’.

Oolon

[ March 28, 2002: Message edited by: Oolon Colluphid ]</p>
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Old 03-28-2002, 11:10 AM   #183
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Quote:
Originally posted by Oolon Colluphid:
<strong>
I can’t access the Nature article Ron mentions (can anyone else??), but it looks pretty unlikely that Wood thought the A’piths to be quadrupedal. </strong>
I accessed it the really old fashion way: Walk the mile and a half to the library and visited the stacks. There is simply no claim in paper in question that anything called a hominin is quadrupedal whatsoever. The citation of this paper as supporting that view is an out-and-out lie. I will start a new thread on this issue.
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Old 03-28-2002, 11:25 AM   #184
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Quote:
Originally posted by lpetrich:
<strong>
Finally, some people seem to have little competence at even the simplest mathematics; I remember an employee of a local deli, a middle-aged woman who was likely in the business for some time, who fumbled when counting up the change for a purchase -- and who was totally unable to do the calculation in a non-reflexive fashion.</strong>
Was she having trouble counting the change or making the change?

Most people these days seem to have problem making change if they can't use the machine to do it for them (like for example they enter the cash tendered wrong close out the order). The trick to do this is rather simple: but most retail establishments don't bother to teach their employees it anymore. Do not try to do the subtraction in one's head, but rather start at the amount of purchase and count up to the amount of money given by the customer. Say a ten was given for a 3.33 order. Start at 3.33. Two pennies go to 3.35. A nickle and a dime to 3.50. Two quarters to 4.00. Give a picture of George Washington to 5.00 and a picture of Honest Abe to 10.00. Many clerks will have trouble doing the subtraction in their head, or will try to find a paper and pen and start doing the subtraction. But this method is easier and faster though very few clerks know it these days. It NOT because they are stupid, it is because no one ever took the minute to explain the procedure to them.
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Old 03-28-2002, 11:36 AM   #185
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Quote:
Originally posted by Bait:
<strong>
Oolon, the reality is that there were 47 footprints of human children there, 20 of a 10 year old and 27 of one younger in age.
</strong>

Can't even get the number of footprints correct Bait?

There are at least 69 of them!
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Old 03-28-2002, 11:51 AM   #186
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Quote:
Originally posted by Bait:
<strong>
Russell Tuttle who examined the footprints wrote:
Ref. Ian Anderson, New Scientist, Vol 98, 1983, p. 373.

“A small barefoot Homo sapiens could have made them... In all discernible morphological features, the feet of the individuals that made the trails are indistinguishable from those of modern humans.”

</strong>
A small barefoot Homo sapiens COULD have made them. But the point is not that H. sapiens made them, but that they are walking in a similiar fashion to modern humans. The book From Lucy to Language addresses Tuttle's claims.
Quote:
Which hominid made these footprints? The answer seems obvious, because the only hominid preent in the Laetoli deposits was A. afarensis, and by inference the footprints must have been made by members of this species. One scientist, Russell Tuttle, anatomist at the University of Chicago, looked t the foot fossils from Hadar and said they wre too larg to fit into the Laetoli impressions. The Laetoli prints, according to Tuttle, were so modern that they could not have been made by a large-footed A. afarensis with somewhat curved toes. The implication was that another hominid, more Homo-like, made the prints, but strangely, not a single bone of such a hminid has been found at Laetoli. ONe would also have to explain why A afarensis left bones at Laetoli but no footprints.

To address Tuttle's assertions, anthropologist Gen Suwa at the University of Tokyo, Japan, and Tim White at the University of California, Berkeley, took a closer look at the Hadar foot bones in 1983. They scaled down the anotomy of the bones to Lucy's size, and the reconstructed foot fit perfectly into the Laetoli prints. until the phantom homid at Laetoli, who left footprints but no fossil remains, is found, the best bet is to infer that A. afarensis was responsible for the Laetoli footprint trail. To find afarensis footprints was nothing short of a miracle!
I do quibble about the last sentense of the first paragraph, but it is clear that Bait is pulling an outdated assertion.
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Old 03-28-2002, 02:39 PM   #187
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I have already smacked Bait upside the head with this one (since I've had this paper in my files for some years now), and he is contrite (see our exchange somewhere in the middle of page 7). However, in his contrition he established that he has not read the paper for himself, but got it from some other "source". I wonder if the "source" has read the paper, or whether we're involved in some bizarre creationist version of "Telephone".

If anyone has a reference to do with hominid evolution they would like to check out, you can try me: I don't have everything, of course, but I have a lot, and I try to keep my Endnote database up to date. At least I can tell you pretty quickly if I don't have it.

I admit that I was rather shocked to see so blatant an invention myself, but at least Bait did not try to make excuses for it. Perhaps he will learn to check his facts; I have already found a large number of plain factual errors he has made, and I haven't read all of his posts yet.

Deb

Quote:
Originally posted by LordValentine:
<strong>

I accessed it the really old fashion way: Walk the mile and a half to the library and visited the stacks. There is simply no claim in paper in question that anything called a hominin is quadrupedal whatsoever. The citation of this paper as supporting that view is an out-and-out lie. I will start a new thread on this issue.</strong>
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Old 03-28-2002, 03:04 PM   #188
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Hi Oolon: a nitpick--what was the source of your picture of "Ramapithcus"? I ask because of the caption Ramapithcus "Lufengpithecus" lufengensis.

These days "Ramapithecus" is a junior synonym of Sivapithecus, and Lufengpithecus is an entirely distinct genus, generally placed either within the Subfamily Ponginae (which includes Ankarapithecus, Sivapithecus, Gigantopithecus, and Pongo) or within Dryopithecinae with (what else?) Dryopithecus.

(If this is off Dennis Etler's site, I think he does explain this a bit).

I think that the fossil Bait probably has in mind is not this one, but a rather more fragmentary anterior mandible of Sivapithecus.

Deb


Quote:
Originally posted by Oolon Colluphid:
<strong>

Sorry, I guess it wasn't entirely clear. However, yeah thanks, I know Ramapithecus is in the orang-utan lineage. I’ve known it since I first read Gribbin and Cherfas’s The Monkey Puzzle back in 1985. In fact, I’m sure I’ve posted about this as an example of a paradigm shift, where the ‘molecular clock’, disbelieved for quite a while by palaeontologists, was gradually confirmed by the fossils, and knocked about 10 million years off the human-ape divergence.

So the questions (still) are:

1) References please for “the mandibular structure of Australopithecus afarensis look[ing] very similar to Ramapithecus”. Which palaeoanthropologist or anatomist has ever said so?

2) You can decide for yourself. After looking at “the mandibular structure” of the afarensis and orang skulls above, and/or these mandibles:

Ramapithecus (Lufengpithecus) lufengensis



Australopithecus afarensis (composite reconstruction)



... please define ‘very similar’.

Oolon

[ March 28, 2002: Message edited by: Oolon Colluphid ]</strong>
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Old 03-28-2002, 03:50 PM   #189
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Quote:
Originally posted by Ergaster:

<strong>Hi Oolon: a nitpick--what was the source of your picture of "Ramapithcus"? I ask because of the caption Ramapithcus "Lufengpithecus" lufengensis.

These days "Ramapithecus" is a junior synonym of Sivapithecus, and Lufengpithecus is an entirely distinct genus, generally placed either within the Subfamily Ponginae (which includes Ankarapithecus, Sivapithecus, Gigantopithecus, and Pongo) or within Dryopithecinae with (what else?) Dryopithecus.
</strong>
Nit-pick away by all means! I have to admit to never having previously heard of Lufengpithecus, and simply (ie in a creationist manner ) copied it off the site I found it. Now you mention it, Sivapithecus I know is right, but like I say, I was doing it from work...

Now, ref the picture, here's the cheat: the way I said about getting the URL of a picture... well it works here too. Just right-click the image, and its Properties tell you the source. In this case, it was the first useful thing Google brought up when looking for 'Ramapithecus', 'jaw' and 'picture'. It's from <a href="http://www.chineseprehistory.org" target="_blank">http://www.chineseprehistory.org</a> ... and that's how I found the site again now, sitting at home...

Cheers, Oolon

[ March 28, 2002: Message edited by: Oolon Colluphid ]</p>
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Old 03-31-2002, 11:16 AM   #190
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A reply in three parts.

Part One.


Quote:
Hello Deb,
Sorry it took so long getting back, my server has been down for a while. I don't mind at all you replying for Oolon, I welcome your input. So here goes:
Glad to do it for him. It has turned out to be a rather longer project than I anticipated, though.

Part of the problem is that you do not have much, if any background in human evolution studies. This is readily apparent by your continual errors in anatomy, and your continual misinterpretation of the context of the quotes you use (I should also observe that the very fact that you seem to believe that out-of-context quotes constitute some kind of evidence demonstrates your naivete about how science in general works). A lot of time has to be spent simply countering the inappropriateness of your choice of "evidence".

I have to say, though, that I find the notion of quoting a source without a) having read it first or b) at least ascertaining that it is accurate, to be rather appalling, but I suppose that is because in a formal academic setting we would never dare to do it. It would be considered very poor scholarship. Of course, this is because quotes do not constitute evidence. Data are evidence, and what counts is the evidence the researchers provide in the primary literature, and not what they muse about to the popular press or in their own popular books.

Quotes in the absence of context are meaningless, and context can only be understood if you are familiar with a body of work. Clearly you are not. But perhaps creationists have a different notion of honest scholarship than the rest of us…..

[…]

Quote:
Deb: Furthermore, Mary Leakey wanted her name removed from the Kirtlandia paper NOT because she didn't think that "Lucy" was an ancestor; she wanted it removed because (according to her version) she did not believe that the finds from Laetoli in Kenya were the same thing as the finds from Hadar (including "Lucy"). She was upset because the type specimen for the new species Australopithecus afarensis was one of the
juvenile mandibles she found at Laetoli.

Bait reply: Exactly my point, She believed Johanson was not being exactly honest in his paper and findings, so she did not want her name attached to it. She did not believe that Australopithecus was one of our ancestors…according to what Johanson himself wrote about her, she thought that we are only descended from Homo species.
Not entirely accurate. Whatever her personal views of Johanson (and they no more reflect on the reality of the evidence than his opinion of her does-in other words, it is irrelevant), she believed (as did Richard) that the origin of the genus Homo went deeper in time than generally thought, but she did NOT believe that the genus Homo had no non-Homo ancestors, irrespective of her opinion about any particular species having that status. She was mistaken about the timing, as continuing finds and research demonstrates. I suggest you get up to speed in it. I will gladly recommend some resources, but for the most part they will be drawn from the professional peer-reviewed literature, and not from second-, third-, or worse-hand sources.

In case you do not know, the main peer-reviewed journals they will be drawn from are: Journal of Human Evolution; American Journal of Physical Anthropology; Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences; and (less importantly) Nature and Science (less important because they are very short articles without the necessary detail). There is also an enormous quantity of work collected in a large number of important edited volumes.

Please note that National Geographic, New Scientist, Natural History, and Scientific American, are not considered "peer-reviewed" journals. These present boiled-down, simplified, and popularized overviews, often from a single person's perspective.

The Leakeys certainly believed that humans evolved from non-human ancestors, and Don Johanson was most assuredly not the last person to ever study "Lucy" and her conspecifics. It is unclear why you think that focussing on these people helps make your point. Is it perhaps because you are completely unaware of all the work that has been done?

Quote:
Deb: I say "according to her version" because Johanson and White insist that she had accepted that Australopithecus was the most reasonable genus to which the collected finds from Laetoli and Hadar could be assigned. They were too primitive to be Homo, and erecting a new genus seemed too extreme a step. See Roger Lewin's book Bones of Contention for a fuller version of this controversy.

Bait: They insist that because to admit that a Homo species was found at that layer, would mean that Homo was around much earlier than originally observed and believed. But at Laetoli Homo WAS found in addition to Australopithecus. In particular Homo erectus and Homo habilis, which is rarely mentioned.
"They insist"? Do you perhaps have the actual quotations and page numbers?

Of course, the genus Homo does not equal the species Homo sapiens-some of the earliest members of the genus Homo were quite primitive-looking. You seem often to confuse the genus Homo (which consists of a number of different species) with H. sapiens, and that would be a rather embarrassing error on your part. You've already made a number of fairly blatant gaffes. I suppose Homo erectus and H. habilis may be "rarely mentioned" in creationist literature…but so what? What counts is the professional paleoanthropological literature. You might be surprised at what gets mentioned there. Besides, it has been known for some time that some species of australopithecines and some species of early Homo co-existed (but not 3.8 million years ago at Laetoli…). Why is that a surprise to you?



Quote:
Bait: Yes, and Mary Leakey died in 1996, and your point is??? There is a current debate as to where Afarensis fits in, and whether it is an ancestor to Homo, as I'll show later.
And once again-so what? How does this either a) make afarensis an "ape" and/or b) negate human evolution? On the face of it, the actual ancestral status of A. afarensis is irrelevant to those points (which seem to be the ones you are trying to make). Perhaps you do not understand the nature of the debate. There are a large number of australopithecine species currently known. Several co-existed. Clearly they all couldn't be the ancestor to Homo If "Lucy" wasn't, one of the others (or even a hominid we have not yet found) surely was.

Not to mention the fact that the elder Leakeys do not participate in paleoanthropological research any more (and to be quite accurate, Mary Leakey never really did-she proffered opinions on occasion, but she was an archaeologist and preferred to stick with artifacts). There have been considerable advances in knowledge since they died/retired, and if their beliefs have not withstood the test of time and evidence, well, thems the breaks. You need to focus less on individuals and more on the actual evidence and the expertise needed to evaluate it.

...

Quote:
Bait: I already acknowledged the knee was found by Johanson. However, the fact is, that Johanson found it at a different level than the Lucy skeleton, then used it as evidence of bipedal locomotion of the Lucy find.
A complete distortion of the truth. The knee was assigned to the A. afarensis species, because that is where it fits best anatomically and temporally (i.e. there was nothing else around it could belong to). It is unambiguously bipedal, BUT it is not modern human in its anatomy. Therefore, even before "Lucy" was found, Johanson knew that a bipedal hominid had lived in the landscape. However, "Lucy" was understood to be bipedal on the strength of her own anatomy alone. She has femora, and she has hip bones, and by those bones alone (in A. robustus and A. africanus) it was known that australos were bipedal long before "Lucy" was discovered. She has almost exactly the same locomotor anatomy as those other two australos (see a whole bunch of articles from the peer-reviewed professional literature by Henry McHenry, one of the foremost functional anatomists).

Here's a clue (I tried to give this to you earlier, but I do not think you picked it up): there is no reason to believe that the only way to be bipedal is to be like modern Homo sapiens. It is abundantly clear that australos were completely bipedal, even if it was not identical to us. In other words, it is entirely possible to be bipedal and not be identical to us, and if you think that a competent anatomist cannot determine that from a skeleton, you are sadly mistaken.

Quote:
Yes, I know Lucy was not the only fossil, but she is the most complete. The supposition that australopithecine's walked upright has never been fully accepted…there has always been controversy on that subject.
Oops. No, sorry, but there hasn't. Debates about the nature of bipedality are not debates about the fact of bipedality. The first is ongoing, but less lively than it used to be. The second (the FACT of bipedality) is not debated at all. Surely the distinction here is not too subtle for you, is it?

….

Quote:
Bait: Incorrect, see below. And what non-human traits do they see? The ONLY reason anyone has not to attribute these footprints to modern humans (Homo sapiens), is because of the depth of the find. It would put humans in the same time frame as australo's, which means that the Homo species could NOT have descended from them. Look at the photo's of the prints…EVERYTHING about them screams Homo sapien.
Sigh. I've looked at more than photos of them, Bait. I've looked at casts of the prints at least twice a week for about five years running. I've seen Philip Tobias take a cast of "Little Foot", which is of an australopithecine, and place it into one of the prints of the cast, where it fit very nicely, thankyouverymuch (and one desperately hopes, if you are determined to have this discussion, that you are aware of Philip Tobias at least). The only people who could claim that "everything about them screams Homo sapien (sic)…" are people who have actually never seen them.

It may come as a surprise, but the Laetoli prints do not, and have never, constituted the primary evidence (heck, they are barely secondary) of bipedalism in australos. That is restricted to skeletal anatomy and the conclusions that can be drawn as to function. We would know for absolute certain that australos were bipedal if the prints had never existed-and make no mistake about it-australo bipedalism is one of the facts in paleoanthropology that is NOT disputed at all.

And before you start declaring "WRONG" and tossing even more irrelevant and erroneous quotes around, you should realize that I am in a rather better position than you are to know what the workers in the field of human evolution actually believe or do not believe. And when you say that there are questions about the fact of australo bipedality, you are either ignorant or deliberately lying. Please refer back to the distinction above. Every single quote you have tried to use relates to the debate about the nature of australo bipedality, not its fact.



Quote:
. Bait: Actually you're incorrect. It is NOT a safe bet. You ignore altogether what else was found near the footprints, AND you (and many others) seem to ignore what the footprints looked like, and that the smaller footprints tried to stay within the larger one's. You also ignore the statements I provided, although they were saying how they looked like Homo footprints. No they did not say that they WERE Homo footprints, but they did not say they were not either. It appears that there was one set of larger prints, of a Homo species, estimated at around 5 feet tall. Inside his steps, there appears to be footprints of a smaller version trying to step within the larger steps. The third set is one smaller still. All of the prints look like human footprints. The ONLY reason they are attributed to Australopithecus is because they appear at the same level as Australopithecus bones were found...period. In fact, how the footprints were attributed to Australopithecus was described as follows:

Quote:"We even had a set of footprints. Owen called the famous footprint trail discovered in 1978 by Mary Leakey's team at Laetoli, Tanzania, the "perfect cementing evidence" for bipedalism [walking upright on two feet]. In a trail of ash that has been dated to 3.5 million years ago, the tracks of two hominids were captured for a distance of nearly eighty feet, lasting impressions that give us a direct glimpse of how they got around. I believe that afarensis made the footprints--first because afarensis fossils have been found at Laetoli, and second, because a composite foot, made from fossil bones belonging to Homo from nearby Olduvai Gorge combined with Hadar toe bones, has been shown to fit the Laetoli prints. When a chimpanzee walks on two legs, it leaves a print with the big toe splayed away from the rest of the foot. The Laetoli prints resemble modern human footprints, with the big toe in line with the other toes."
Bait: So Johanson took a Homo foot, found in a different location, added the TOE bones of afarensis to it, and then fitted it to the footprints, then he BELIEVED they just HAD to be Afarensis…but not the Homo species he had added the toes to. Do you not see something wrong here? He BELIEVED afarensis made the prints because the prints were found at the same level as afarensis bones and because the TOES seemed to match the prints. Have you seen the prints? You can look at them here:

<a href="http://www.mnh.si.edu/anthro/humanorigins/ha/laetoli.htm" target="_blank">http://www.mnh.si.edu/anthro/humanorigins/ha/laetoli.htm</a>
And here: <a href="http://www.humanevolution.f2s.com/laetolifoot.html" target="_blank">http://www.humanevolution.f2s.com/laetolifoot.html</a>

Do they look like ape prints…or Homo sapiens? Honestly. What about the Homo erectus and Homo habilis that was also found at that level? Why are they ignored?
What about the stone hut that was found…the same kind used by African tribes even today? Reference: A. J. Kelso, Physical Antropology, 1st ed., New York: J. B. Lipincott Co., 1970, p. 221; M. D. Leakey, Olduvai Gorge,
There are no Homo erectus or H. habilis fossils found 3.8 mya at Laetoli. There were no H. erectus or H. habilis fossils found at the same age level at Olduvai, because the oldest level at Olduvai is only about 1.96 million years old (Walter et al. 1991. Laser-fusion 40Ar/39Ar dating of Bed I, Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania. Nature 354:145-149).

There is no "stone hut". Louis Leakey thought he saw a pattern in an arrangement of stones, but further research has shown that this arrangement was purely natural. (See Potts, R. 1988. Early Hominid Activities at Olduvai. New York: Aldine de Gruyter).

….

Quote:
Bait: Duh…. they LOOKED LIKE human prints…but they could not be human prints because the prints were not at the level you would expect to see the prints….is that what you're saying? Look at the photo's again…he did NOT overstate his points…he was being HONEST. They LOOKED, and LOOK like human prints…and where is the evidence that they were not? Just because australos fossils were found at the same level? Just because Johanson says so?

….

Bait: Well, lets see, if they look like human prints, the anatomy of the print appears to have an arch like humans, the toes grip like humans…but that actually means they are really ape….right? Where is she saying an ape made them? Again, the evidence points toward a Homo species making them. Where is the evidence that australos made them? Was not Lucy too small to have made the larger ones? The larger ones are
evidence that the (creature)was about 5 feet tall or better, much larger than Lucy.
Who said they were "ape"? They were made by australos. Australos are not apes. You are trying to set up a false dichotomy. Won't work.

….

Quote:
Bait: (sigh) Ok, since you insist: Russell Tuttle also wrote in 1990:
In sum, the 3.5 million-year-old footprint traits at Laetoli site G resemble those of habitually unshod modern humans. None of their features suggest that the Laetoli hominids were less capable bipeds than we are. If the G footprints were not known to be so old, we would readily conclude that there were made by a member of our genus Homo... In any case, we should shelve the loose assumption that the Laetoli footprints were made by Lucy's kind, Australopithecus afarensis.
Russell H. Tuttle, Natural History, March 1990, pp. 61-64.

Bait: So the ONLY reason to believe that they are not of our genus Homo, is the age of the prints, and it's pretty conclusive that Australopithecus afarensis did NOT make them.

Well, lets see, you see something that moves and acts like fire, looks like fire, makes smoke, and burns you if you try to touch it…pretty good evidence that it is probably fire. If it LOOKS like human prints…what evidence is there that they are NOT human prints? Again, just because they are on the wrong level than would be expected? As to no other evidence…you mean besides the fossils of Homo erectus, Homo habilis, and a stone hut? Thought you scientists were supposed to be unbiased. Would not finding prints on a deeper level, by itself indicate humans could maybe have been here a lot longer than you expected, perhaps even prior to australos? Is that not more logical than adding ape toes to a Homo foot…and then comparing the prints and declaring that the prints are from an ape?
Let me briefly address some of the issues above. There are a number of them, and I have taken the liberty of cutting out the earlier responses to save space.

But first: It is pointless to argue over a series of out-of-context quotes, Bait. Quotes ARE NOT EVIDENCE. Furthermore, quotes taken from popular articles are generally oversimplified and dumbed-down versions of the research, anyway, which makes them worth even less. However, since the people you quote manifestly DO NOT believe that the prints were made by modern humans, and have NEVER claimed that they were, and since they are trained in anatomy, comparative and functional morphology, archaeological methods, are experienced in field work and have first-hand and intimate knowledge of the fossils, their conclusions are far more trustworthy than yours. You have not demonstrated a sufficient grasp of any of the relevant disciplines, nor have you any experience whatsoever in any first-hand comparisons of even good-quality casts. You may wish that the prints are human to your heart's content, but what you wish, in the absence of any corroborating evidence, is irrelevant. Likewise you may try to distort the words of others to insist that they mean something they simply do not, but that is plainly dishonest.

Issue: the prints are not all that well preserved, in the sense that they are not perfect. They are distorted; the edges squished up, the details blurred, and because of the overlap of one print into another, there just isn't a lot of information to be extracted. The best one can do with them is a very general comparison, and in a general comparison they are quite similar to human prints. They are NOT identical (i.e. the hallux is more abducted than is normal in humans, even if it is "aligned" compared to the hallux of chimps). It is impossible to identify the maker of the prints from the evidence of the prints alone. You have not ruled out-heck, you haven't even addressed-the obvious possibility that whatever features exist in common between human and the Laetoli prints are there because they are common to bipedal primates-i.e. they are functional necessities.

Issue: there are no fossils of Homo anything found at 3.8 mya. If you think that there are, then the onus is on YOU to provide the citations from the literature to support your claim. Unsupported assertions are meaningless and irrelevant. There is zero corroborative evidence of Homo at the relevant time frame, and since the prints themselves are not well-enough preserved to draw any conclusions as to identity, one has to go with the evidence that exists. The only biped around at the same time as the prints is Australopithecus.

Issue: Australopithecines were bipedal. Full stop. There are not a lot of issues in paleoanthropology on which a complete consensus exists, but the fact of australo bipedality is one of them. As noted above, you have misidentified the nature of the debate.

Issue: Australos are not "apes". They are distinctly different in fundamental ways from any great ape, living or extinct, we know of, so trying to insist they are "apes" simply because they are not human is specious and irrelevant hand-waving, not to mention circular.

Issue: it is irrelevant what Johanson claims or did in the absence of corroborative evidence. If he claims that "Lucy" was a biped, and the evidence, as determined by other trained paleoanthroplogists, supports this claim, then that's what the evidence says. If he claims that "Lucy" flew but the evidence does NOT support it, then he can claim and proclaim and write books til he's blue in the face, but all the proclaiming in the world won't make it true. What matters is the evidence, not the individual. Why you have it in for Don Johanson is entirely unclear. The vast majority of the studies of "Lucy" and her kind in the almost-thirty years since she was discovered have NOT been done by Johanson.

Issue: there is a large degree of sexual dimorphism (size difference between the sexes) in australopithecines. "Lucy", as a female, was too small to have made the largest of the prints, but a male A. afarensis definitely could have.

Issue: since I have seen more than photos of the prints, and I have seen and personally handled more than photos of the fossils, and since I have some formal training in the relevant disciplines, I am willing to trust my own experience and knowledge (whether anyone else reading this wants to trust my judgement is up to them). Contrary to your assertion, I have ignored none of the evidence, and I have ignored none of the quotes that you have provided. I have given them all the consideration they deserve. What is important is the evidential context that the author of the quotes used and was aware of, and in that context there is no evidence at all that Homo made the prints.

Issue: please note where Tuttle says: "…in all DISCERNIBLE morphological features…"-now why do you think that word ("discernible") is there?

Issue: this probably bears repeating. The genus Homo is not restricted to Homo sapiens. The earliest members of our genus were quite primitive, and in many ways did not resemble Homo sapiens very closely.

Issue: it is not "pretty obvious" in the least that A. afarensis did not make them. There still is no definitive evidence of any other hominid that existed at the same time as the prints. You have completely failed to show otherwise.

Issue: You have still failed to support your assertion that any paleoanthropologist claims the prints were made by modern humans.

Quote:
Bait: Your right, and there were actually 67 prints total (I read my source wrong)…but that makes my point even more. So this action of stepping in the older persons footprints is an ape trait? Actually it's a distinctive human trait (Yes, meaning Homo sapiens), like a child trying to match it's older brothers or fathers…elders footsteps. Apes do not do that kind of action, they are not even aware of the footprints
they leave, much less care if they are walking in someone else's footprints.
Since you know nothing whatsoever of australo social life or their intellectual capabilities, and since australos are not apes, this little assessment of yours is meaningless. You have not demonstrated that such behaviour is a "distinctive human trait" at all. How do you know that chimps would not do it? Wishful thinking?

Quote:
Bait: Actually the quote comes from Solly Zuckerman, Beyond The Ivory Tower, New York: Toplinger Publications, 1970, pp. 75-94. , NOT the 1950's. And to a large part, Oxnard agreed with him.
So what? He STILL never looked at afarensis, and his conclusions were never corroborated by the evidence.

Quote:
The findings for Oxnard can be found, where he likened the skeletal structure of Australopithecines to that of modern orang-utans: Charles E. Oxnard, "The Place of Australopithecines in Human Evolution: Grounds for Doubt", Nature, Vol 258, p. 389
The orang issue is addressed in a reply to Oolon: briefly, with a quote from that very paper that plainly states orangs are not the model for australos. You will also find it under the new thread "Australopithecine bipedalism".

Quote:
Bait: Thank you for that acknowledgement. But then, why are you trying to attribute the footprints to them…the footprints strides, shape and form match that of modern humans, not ape, nor australopithecine's. If australopithecine's don't walk like modern humans…then where is the debate, and where's the evidence that they are related…ancestors of humans, or that Homo sapiens evolved from them?
This really does seem to be difficult for you to grasp, doesn't it? The evidence for bipedalism has NOTHING to do with the footprints. The footprints are confirmation that the maker was not an ape, and that the form of the foot that made them was closer in morphology to a human foot than to an ape foot. Since australos are bipedal, and they are not apes, and there is no evidence of any other bipedal hominid around at the time the prints were made, then we have no reason to assume that australos did NOT make them. You, and NO-ONE ELSE, are the only one who seems to think that if someone says that A is similar to B, then A must be B, a logical fallacy clear to everyone but you.

The evidence that australos are our closest extinct ancestors is not dependent upon the prints, nor is it dependent upon bipedalism. The evidence that they are our closest relatives and probably ancestral lies in the fact that all life on earth is related in a specific hierarchical pattern, and the morphology of australos is entirely consistent with this fact. Australos share features in common with modern humans that they do not share with apes, features that are more recent in origin than the features that they do share with apes. They also possess features that are unique to them, so of course they are not identical to modern humans. Only those with an extremely poor and cartoonish understanding of evolution could claim that australos can't be related to modern humans because they do not look or act like modern humans.

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End part one.

[ March 31, 2002: Message edited by: Ergaster ]</p>
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