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Old 03-31-2002, 11:19 AM   #191
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Part two of three
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What makes them bipedal? Did they use their knuckles to assist them in walking? If they did, then they are quadropedal. Did they only walk a short distance on two feet only, as chimps do? Was it their habit, their normal way of locomotion to walk fully upright?
What made them bipedal is the same kind of anatomy that makes us bipedal. Hip bones that are bowl-shaped, and shortened from top to bottom. This shape shifts the position of the hip, thigh, and abdominal muscles so that the leg can be swung out and around, that the thigh can be extended in front of the body, and so that the torso can be balanced upright over the hips. This is NOT the configuration that is found in apes, who have tall and narrow hip bones, with the important locomotor muscles in a completely different position around the hip joint than in australos and humans.

Lumbar lordosis. the curvature in the lower back found in humans that allows us to stand straight. Australos have lumbar lordosis, apes do not.

Widened sacrum. The sides of the sacrum are very broad and flared in australos and humans, indicating that body weight is concentrated in the sacrum and distributed outward through the sacral alae, through the pelvis, and into the thigh bones. Apes do not distribute their body weight in that manner (it is not concentrated onto the sacrum), so their sacrum is very narrow.

Femoral angle. The condyles (the pair of bumps) at the knee-end of the femur in australos and humans are not at the same angle-that is, if you place both condyles on a flat surface, the shaft of the bone tilts off to the side. This is because when both humans and australos stand upright, the knees come together at the midline of the body. The ape femur has no angle. If you place both condyles on a flat surface, the ape femur sticks straight up in the air.

Patellar groove. Because of the femoral angle, there is a tendency for the kneecap to want to be pulled off to one side. The deep groove on the front of the femur, and the elevated lip along the outside edge of the groove, helps keep the kneecap in place. Apes do not have it, because they do not need it.

The horizontal angle of the distal tibia. In a biped, the articulation between the lower leg and the ankle bones is horizontal, for obvious reasons. In apes, it is not.

The internal stress-reducing structure of the spongy bone of the hip. Radiographs of humans and australos have shown that the arrangement of trabeculae in the hip bones of australos is arranged in largely the same way as it is in humans-a way that disseminates stress and distributes the weight of the body into the thigh bones. This arrangement is absent in chimps and quadrupedal primates, because the body is not habitually held upright (see: Galichon V & Thackeray JF. 1997. CT scans of trabecular bone structures in the ilia of Sts 14 (Australopithecus africanus), Homo sapiens, and Pan paniscus. South African Journal of Science 93:179-180).

These are just some of the anatomical correlates of bipedalism. They are all found in modern humans and in australos. None of them are found in apes.

Australos did not knuckle-walk. There is evidence that the last common ancestor of African apes and australos (and humans) knuckle-walked, but that this was lost in the lineage leading to humans (i.e. in australos and earlier bipedal hominids). Modern human wrists and finger bones do have hints of this knuckle-walking past, but you can tell that australos did not knuckle-walk because there is no evidence that they bore weight on their forearms (their elbow joints and finger joints look pretty much like those of modern humans).

ALL the evidence says that the ONLY way australos walked while on the ground was on two feet. They were not quadrupeds at all.

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Bait: If that is what it actually says, and all it says, then I very much apologize, and retract that quote. I have sent a letter to the source of my quote, requesting they also retract what they have stated/quoted. I'll go and find the exact wording to see what it says for myself. I personally was not making it up…I got that from another source. But do note that according to your quote of their findings, they do say that the fossils they examined did not have modern human style of bipedalism, if you accept the premise of a link between labyrinth proportions and locomotion.
I hope you start checking your sources rather more carefully. And since no-one expects an australopithecine to behave like a modern human…shrug….

[quote]Deb: There was actually a fair amount of variability in the fossils. A further, greatly enhanced study that included a large number of primates, showed that the link between locomotion and the proportions of the bony labyrinth is even LESS clearcut than was thought, and no direct associations can be made. However, I have seen no creationist source cite this later, more comprehensive paper--could it be because the conclusions are not very favourable to them? This study is: Spoor F. & Zonnefeld F. 1998. Comparative review of the human bony labyrinth. Yearbook of Physical Anthropology 41:211-251.

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Bait: How does that hurt the creationist view? All that says is that the use of bony labyrinth shouldn't be used to prove or test types of locomotion, because that method is unreliable. Thank you for the source though, I'll look it up as well. But while we are on this subject, the bones of the ear canals of the australo's are totally different than those of Homo sapiens..or any Homo species.
My point is that creationists have a bad habit of not modifying their arguments in the face of plainly contrary evidence. I predict that this argument will continue to be used even though it has been markedly weakened by subsequent research. At the moment the fact that the bony labyrinth is not like that of modern humans is evidence of nothing, except the entirely trivial observation that australos were not modern humans….well, duh.

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But since we are on that subject,
quote: "The comparative analysis of the semicircular canals of the inner ears of men and apes has demonstrated that the creatures which were alleged to have been ancestors of man were in truth ordinary apes. Australopithecus and Homo habilis have the inner ear canals of an ape whereas Homo erectus has the inner ear canal of a man. "

Source: Evolution deceit by Harum Yahya

Bait: Yet another difference...another nail in the coffin.
HARUN YAHYA???? BWAHAHAHA!!!! That source is even more ridiculous than quoting Duane Gish or Kent Hovind, if such a thing is possible! But go right ahead and use it, if personal credibility means nothing to you….

Since the relationship of australos to humans is not dependent upon the proportions of the inner ear (since it is not dependent upon any single character, anyway), the quote is meaningless from an evidentiary standpoint, as well as a credibility one.

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Bait: Incorrect, there is much doubt, and there are many who disagree, and do not think australopithecine's walked upright.
See above, about the nature of the debate. You have completely missed the point. NO debate about the fact of bipedalism. Please learn the difference.

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In fact, there was even a debate as to the validity of the species of A. afarensis, although many researchers now do accept it as a new species.

See: <a href="http://www.humanevolution.f2s.com/afarensis.html" target="_blank">http://www.humanevolution.f2s.com/afarensis.html</a>

Here are some of the "doubts:
quote:"A chance discovery made by looking at a cast of the bones of "Lucy," the most famous fossil of Australopithecus afarensis, shows her wrist is stiff, like a chimpanzee's, Brian Richmond and David Strait of George Washington University in Washington, D.C., reported. This suggests that her ancestors -- and ours-- walked on their knuckles. The stiff wrist limits the flexibility of the hand but makes the forearm strong
enough to carry the weight of a heavy primate" ("Man's early ancestors were knuckle walkers" by Maggie Fox, San Diego Union Tribune Quest Section, March 29th, 2000)
Nope, wrong again. Try reading for comprehension, specifically the part that says "This suggests that HER ANCESTORS…walked on their knuckles". Not "she", but her ANCESTORS. I addressed this above, if you recall. The wrist of Lucy has a remnant of that knuckle-walking past, just as you and I have a remnant (we have lost the one referred to in the article, but we share some others with Lucy that stabilize the wrist). The retention of these wrist-stabilizing features no more means that Lucy knuckle-walked than they mean that we knuckle-walk. In fact, we know she didn't because, as I said above, there are no features in the elbow and fingers that indicate any ability to bear weight on the forearms, features that the knuckle-walking gorilla and chimp most assuredly DO have.

And before you start referring me to websites or other articles, when the original article came out, I went to the lab and compared the fossils for myself. I already have notes and sketches. I already know exactly what everything looks like. This is not evidence that Lucy knuckle-walked, and the articles do not claim it is (there is a longer, more recent article that came out a few months ago).

[quote]"We've got to have some ancestors. We'll pick those. Why? Because we know they have to be there, and these are the best candidates. That's by and large the way it has worked. I am not exaggerating." (Nelson, Gareth [Chairman and Curator of the Department of Herpetology and Ichthyology, American Museum of Natural History, New York], interview, Bethell T., The Wall Street Journal, December 9, 1986, in Johnson P.E., "Darwin on Trial," InterVarsity Press: Downers Grove Ill., Second Edition, 1993, p76)

"Restricting analysis of fossils to specimens satisfying these criteria, patterns of dental development of gracile australopithecines and Homo Habilis remain classified with African apes. Those of Homo erectus and Neanderthals are classified with humans." (Holly Smith, American Journal of Physical Antropology, Vol 94, 1994, pp. 307-325.

Irrelevant, meaningless, and completely out of context (please explain why I should pay any attention at all to a fish and snake expert about human evolution????) What "criteria" is Holly Smith referring to? What is the significance of patterns of dental development to the discussion we are having here, and why do you think they have any? You appear to be grasping at random.

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"The present results lead to the conclusion that the bipedalism of the Australopithecus must have differed from that of Homo. Not only did Australopithecus have less ability to maintain hip and knee extension during the walk, but also probably moved the pelvis and lower limb differently. It seems that the australopithecine walk differed significantly from that of humans, involving a sort of waddling gait, with large rotary movements of the pelvis and shoulders around the vertebral column. Such a walk, likely required a greater energetic cost than does human bipedalism. The stride length and frequency of australopithecines, and consequently their speed, should have differed from that of Homo in contrast to some recent hypotheses of dynamic similarity among hominids. A previous paper has suggested that the pelvic proportions of Australopithecus could provide some arguments for an arboreal locomotion. The results of the present study suggest amplification of this opinion." (Berg, Christine, "How Did the Australopithecines Walk? A Biomechanical Study of the Hip and Thigh of Australopithecus Afarensis," Journal of Human Evolution, vol. 26 (April 1994), pp. 259-273. Berg is at the Natural History Museum in Paris, France.)
Since we have already established that australos didn't walk like modern humans, and that being identical to modern humans is not a prerequisite to being ancestral to modern humans (in fact, it would probably indicate that they weren't)….what's yer point? Berge certainly believes they were bipedal, and she does not say otherwise in this article (and yes, I do have it in my files…).

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and finally:
"The study of human origins seems to be a field in which each discovery raises the debate to a more sophisticated level of uncertainty." (Christopher B. Stringer, Scientific American; May 1993, p.138)
Irrelevant. He is not referring to WHETHER australos are bipedal at all. That is one fact that there is no uncertainty about whatsoever. Why don't you fire off an email and ask?

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Bait: But there is NO doubt amongst a single professional…okaaaaaay, if you say so…..
I do say so, and you have utterly failed to demonstrate otherwise. Not a single one of your quotes contradicted the fact of australo bipedalism.

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The truth is that it's those with humanist beliefs that insist that they are bipedal, even though the evidence also points otherwise. The evidence is that they were quadropedal, though they probably walked upright for short distances, just like chimp's do. As to functional morphology, how could an ape be like an ape from the waist up, and only like human from the waist down? Nature does not work that way. They would have to have other human like traits, which they do not.
Are you sure you aren't so blinded by your own bias that you are not simply ignoring all that inconvienient evidence that they were bipedal? I mean, not a single solitary one of your quotes actually supported your position, and you CLEARLY lack the expertise required to even know enough not to make brain-dead statements like "how could an ape be like an ape from the waist up…." Duh. Most people who don't know anything at all about a topic have enough humility to try not to completely embarrass themselves in public; what is it about creationists that they so often lack this characteristic? Bait, it is plain as day that you don't know your coccyx from your olecranon process, so you have no idea whatsoever how australos compare to either humans or apes, or even where to begin to know. You have made a LOT of factual errors. As the man once said: if you find yourself in a hole, the best thing to do is stop digging.

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Narikotome homo erectus (Turkana boy) was found near Lake Turkana Kenya…who WAS bipedal. But then he is classed as Homo erectus, but the skull looked like a neanderthal. Paleoanthropologist Alan Walker said he doubted that the average pathologist could tell the difference between the fossil and a modern human. Source: Boyce Rensberger, The Washington Post, November 19, 1984.
Which supports my claim that Homo erectus is just another geographical race of Homo sapien.

Lucy, the most complete skeleton of the australo's, was only 40% complete…and did not have a knee joint. Here is a picture of her skeleton:

<a href="http://www.humanevolution.f2s.com/lucy.html" target="_blank">http://www.humanevolution.f2s.com/lucy.html</a>

Notice the rib cage, and other parts of the skeleton are decidedly APE. The reconstructed skull is also ape. Knucklewalkers (quadropedal) has a ridge of bone extending down the radius to stabilize the wrist when weight is placed on it. The Lucy specimen has evidence of this ridge, though admittedly less evident than what is found in chimps and gorilla's, but it's there none the less.

What is also forgotten is the hip was actually pieced together by Johansons team, as he relates:

Lucy's left innominate [hip-joint socket] had been bent out of shape and broken into about forty pieces while it was embedded in the ground. Owen X-rayed the fossil and discovered that the back of Lucy's pelvis, where the sacrum connects with the innominate, had smashed against a rock or another bone during burial, shattering and twisting the ilium. He then spent six months carefully outlining and numbering each
fragment of ilium, casting each piece of the fossil in plaster, smoothing out the edges, and then reassembling them in a three-dimensional jigsaw puzzle. Every fragment had to line up with adjoining pieces from both the front and the back side of the bone to convince Owen that he had overcome any distortion that occurred after the bone was damaged. Once Owen had restored the left side of the pelvis, he sculpted a mirror image of the right side in plaster and placed Lucy's sacrum in between to complete his masterpiece

So, is it remotely possible that Owen could have slightly mis-aligned the pieces of the hip, making it look more human than it is?

I wish you would stop claiming that people "forget" this and that, because nobody has "forgotten" anything. It's simple: your interpretations are wrong. You are relying on unreliable creationist sources, you haven't read the articles that contain the quotes for yourself, you cannot or will not access the original material, and you do not have the necessary knowledge or training to assess what is important or what anything actually means. The skull of a Homo erectus does not look like the skull of a Neanderthal. If you cannot see the difference, it is not because the entire paleoanthropological community is lying to you, is insane, or is deluded en masse by Satan-it is because YOU do not have the personal expertise to know what to look for. Simple. Likewise, there are a large number of skeletal differences between the Nariokotome Homo erectus and modern humans, and Alan Walker himself contributed to and edited a massive monograph that compared and delineated those differences (Walker A. & Leakey R. (eds) 1993. The Nariokotome Homo erectus Skeleton. Cambridge: Harvard University Press), so I must question the context of your quote.

The skull of afarensis is not of that an ape. It differs in crucial ways. I would suggest that you stop trying to demonstrate your anatomical knowledge, because…you have none, and it is painfully obvious.

The innominate is not the "hip joint socket" (that is called the acetabulum). The sacro-iliac articulation was badly damaged during fossilization, but the hip itself (the innominate) fit back together fairly well; whatever distortion was present had no effect on the overall shape and proportion of it-in order to change that, you'd simply have to smash it into powder with a hammer. Ain't possible. Besides, there already exists an almost complete australo hip, one that's been around for decades before Lucy was ever found-Sts 14. The two are consistent in morphology; in fact, they are almost identical (it would be rather strange to have the hip bone of an australo from East Africa and the hip bone of an australo from South Africa get distorted in exactly the same way, don't you think?).

Anyway, I don't have to look at pictures of Lucy, I have handled a cast of the fossil myself, and that includes the hip bone. So I know what it looks like, I know where the damage is and isn't, and it looks far more human than it does any ape. It is not identical to the hip of modern humans, but it is so close that the differences are in the fine details, and it is, of course, unambiguously bipedal. There's no way around it, I'm afraid.

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Then the knee found at a deeper level (strata) was added to make Lucy seem like she was bipedal. Here is the picture of the knee:

<a href="http://www.humanevolution.f2s.com/al129-1.html" target="_blank">http://www.humanevolution.f2s.com/al129-1.html</a>

Looks like Homo erectus to me, judging from the picture.
LOL!! Yeah, right! Bait, admit it-you couldn't tell if that knee belonged to your grandmother or to Bonzo the chimp! Let's not play games, here. You don't have the faintest clue how to tell the difference, do you?

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How do we know the knee was not from a Homo species such as Homo erectus, that Johanson decided fits well with Lucy?
"We", Kemo Sabe? Speak for yourself. Take a course in human evolutionary anatomy and then get back to us. I don't have any trouble telling the difference.

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As for me citing "one line of the professional literature, or quoted one single living paleoanthropologist, who suggests otherwise" what about Tim White, Russell Tuttle, Charles Oxnard, Louis Robbins, even Roger Lewin's book YOU cited, indicating that there is controversy. I provided some other quotes from professional literature, living paleoanthropologists, other scientists, etc. See above... What more do you need?
For you to support your assertion. You are claiming that there is a debate in the profession about the FACT of australo bipedalism. Need I repeat all this? Every quote you have provided, if they were relevant at all (and many simply weren't-all the blather about what the footprints looked like were quite irrelevant to the issue, because even if humans did make the tracks, that says nothing whatsoever about the bipedality of australos), had to do with the nature of australo bipdalism, not its factuality.

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And as to the debate of the origins of the Homo species in general:
In an article for Science magazine concerning Australopithecus garhi written by :
Berhane Asfaw, 1 Tim White, 2* Owen Lovejoy, 3 Bruce Latimer, 4,5 Scott Simpson, 5 Gen Suwa 6 Science 284: 629-635 (April 23, 1999). "The lack of an adequate hominid fossil record in eastern Africa between 2 and 3 million years ago (Ma) has hampered investigations of early hominid phylogeny"
Using another source you have not read, Bait? Let's complete the quote (which comes from the abstract), shall we? It goes on to say: "Discovery of 2.5 Ma hominid cranial and dental remains from the Hata beds of Ethiopia's Middle Awash allows recognition of a new species of Australopithecus. This species is descended from Australopithecus afarensis and is a candidate ancestor for early Homo. Contemporary postcranial remains feature a derived humanlike humeral/femoral ratio and an apelike upper arm-to-lower arm ratio." (p.629)

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and:

"Great uncertainty has continued to confound the origin of Homo because of a lack of evidence from the interval between 2 and 3 Ma ".
Shall we finish the authors' train of thought here, as well? You seem to have rather unceremoniously cut them off:

"The 2.5 Ma Bouri Hata hominids bear directly on these issues. (p. 630).

So in other words, instead of reinforcing the problem of a lack of fossil evidence, your quote actually PROVIDES evidence, not only for remains within the time frame in question BUT ALSO a possible ancestor for Homo. Boy, I love irony!!


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In other words, their seems to be evidence, but it is still very uncertain as to the origin of the Homo species.

To be fair though, this article goes on to describe new discoveries of a new, similar species to Australo's, and Mr. White is NOT speaking against any australo's. But he does recognise that there is confusion as to the true origins of Homo sapiens. This is my point, you cannot say for certainty that australo's are even related to Homo sapiens, much less our ancestors.
It would have been better if you had provided accurate quotes, don't you think? But let's look at your "analysis". Firstly, the discovery is not of a "new, similar species to Australo's (sic)". It IS an australopithecine. It is a new species of australopithecine. This is not nit-picking. If you want to have some small credibility, you must demonstrate at least a minor familarity with the most basic terms and concepts. You do not.

Secondly, White (and it would be DR White) was NOT referring to the origin of the species Homo sapiens! PLEASE, if you learn anything at all, learn that when one refers to the genus Homo, we do NOT automatically mean Homo sapiens, and if we talk of the origin of the genus Homo, we DEFINITELY are not referring to H. sapiens. I doubt very much, just judging from the-um, lack of expertise you have so far displayed here, that you could distinguish between the earliest species of Homo and its immediate non-Homo ancestor. If evolution is true, they should look exceedingly similar and may differ in only very small ways. In fact, the article you attempted to quote from discussed this. Did you not read it?

There are some issues over the origin of the species Homo sapiens, but that is an entirely separate discussion from the one here, with a whole other set of researchers. Nothing to do with this discussion.

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Bait: Not true, there is a continuing debate over bipedal locomotion, and how they were built from the waist down, as evidenced by the quotes I gave above. You yourself admit that they did not walk as we do.
Sorry, Bait, but you still don't get it. The quotes you have provided are either irrelevant to the question of bipedality, or discuss HOW australos are bipedal. NONE of them question THAT australos are bipedal. I suggest you really try to grasp this fact, and take a careful look at the references.

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Answer this, what advantage in nature is bipedal locomotion without the associated advantages of higher intelligence and hand dexterity? Without the associated advantages, natural selection would have eliminated that species, and the disadvantage of bipedalism would have ceased. Quadropedalism is far more advantageous to survival of the fittest, when compared to bipedalism by itself. There is more evidence that Homo species came on the scene suddenly, than anything else.
Irrelevant. We already know without doubt that bipedalism preceded encephalization. Since natural selection clearly did not "eliminate that species", your question is meaningless. In actual fact, the fossil hominid record indicates that bipedality alone was an enormously successful strategy, because there are no less than 8 species of australopithcines that were bipedal, and several of these species lived at the same time. The evidence seems pretty strong that bipedalism was a niche that led to a great diversification of hominids, including the species that was ancestral to Homo. Even if we do not know exactly why hominids became bipdal, it was beyond question an extremely successful adaptation. Your speculations above bear no relation to reality.

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As to the gossip…I never said Australopithecus afarensis did not exist, just that it is not evidence of ancestry of Homo sapien's, or bipedalism. The "gossip", the rivalry/dispute between Johanson and Leaky casts doubt as to the accuracy of their contentions, especially Johansons, that Australopithecus afarensis is the prelude to Homo sapien.
It means nothing whatsoever. Johanson's "contentions" have been more than supported by the evidence. If I search my database for articles about A. afarensis, I get dozens of hits. If I add "and Johanson" to the search, I get three. In other words, Johanson has contributed very little to the actual analyses of A. afarensis. It is specious to focus on the contributions of a single individual.

Bait original: Australopithecine members had much longer and curved toes (phalanges) and fingers. They also had a cranially orientated shoulder joint and other features of the arms, typical of tree climbers. As well as the foot, and foramen magnum, we see bipedalism in the shape of the pelvis and the angle between the thighbone and the knee (Leakey, 1994).
Deb: Well, so far so good; are you sure you wanted to include this?

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Bait: I had included it to show that I'm not afraid to give evidence from sources on the "other side". The point I was getting to with this quote was that it was admitted that they had cranially orientated shoulder joints, and other features of the arms, typical of tree climbers, not bipedal walkers. I wished to give the full quote though so as not to be accused of using only part of a quote.
LOL!! And what do you think the arms of bipedal walkers would look like? Last time I looked, bipeds walk with their legs, not their arms!

At any rate, the orientation of the shoulder joint is ho-hum news. Coulda told you that myself.

By the way: compared to all other animals, only humans and the apes have a shoulder joint that allows for complete rotation of the arm while holding it above our heads, along with a broad thorax that places our shoulder blades at the back instead of on the sides. Apes have this enormous flexibility because of their origins in arboreal settings. Now why should we have exactly the same anatomy and flexibility of the thorax and shoulder?

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Bait: I never said I did not have an agenda, I'm an admitted creationist…and the quotes you are referring to I have already retracted, and apologized for. I was not intentionally making up, or inventing anything. But my point was to the reliability of Johansons hypothesis, to which Oolon had given several references to prove his point that we are descended from Lucy's kind.
Well, it's not exactly "Johanson's hypothesis", since australo bipedality was pretty firmly established before Johanson arrived. But, as I've said, focussing on an individual is meaningless. Scientific hypotheses are not tied to the loudest mouth, but to the evidence. Johanson made an enormous contribution by discovering the Hadar fossils. But the fossils, and the data they contain, are not his. They are everyone's (and if you think that most paleoanthros go into the biz for "money and fame"-well, you're even more naďve than I thought possible!). The possible ancestral status of A. afarensis has gone far beyond any possible influence Johanson could have. If you don't think australos are ancestral, you are on entirely the wrong track in attempting to disprove it.

[ March 31, 2002: Message edited by: Ergaster ]</p>
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Old 03-31-2002, 11:22 AM   #192
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Part three of three (sigh)

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Remember that you are responding on his behalf, and my post was directed to him, not you, with his style of arguments in mind. He (and others) often tries to shoot down my references by stating that they "have an agenda" ie: they are creationists, so their opinions do not count. Hence my reply concerning Johanson since Oolon was extensively using him as references against my arguments. An example of accounts of Mr. Johansons motivations:
Irrelevant (and that would be DR Johanson). Facts are facts, regardless of whom you are responding to. Since it is the data that count and not anyone's "motivations", it is a waste of time to delve into them. Besides, you seem to be missing an important point here: science is a competitive business. We are explicitly trained and encouraged, in seminars and reading assignments and presentations, to question and critique each other, "each other" meaning not only our classmates, but our supervisors, professors, and the other professionals in the field. We are trained to examine the data, and examine the analyses, and examine the conclusions. Believe me-if Johanson had been wrong, someone (likely plenty of someones) would have been MORE than happy to point it out. New discoveries and novel interpretations are not received unquestioningly; people are highly skeptical until the evidence either disproves or fails to disprove it.

(irrelevancies snipped)

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Bait: So the question becomes "Why did Johanson put australos toes on a Homo foot to compare with the footprints?
Who cares? That's not the sum total of the evidence. In fact, it doesn't even matter.

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Why did he use a knee joint found in a deeper strata to justify the bipedally of Lucy?
He didn't. Lucy was clearly bipedal without it. If you do not understand how everyone knows this, that is merely an indication of your own limitations.

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How is it he just suddenly pictured skull fragments, blew on some dust, and shazaam…they appeared? Could it be to prevent his funding from drying up?
Now you're just being ridiculous.



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Bait: I was not questioning their "agenda's", only Johansons,
Since Johanson is hardly all of paleoanthropology, who cares? It doesn't make australos any less bipedal.

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but many of those you speak of start out with a humanist mindset, meaning with preconceived ideas that man could only have come from apes, just like I have preconceived ideas from a creationists point of view. I believe humans, Homo sapiens sapiens, was the result of an intelligent design, by a higher intelligence I refer to as God, others YAHWA, Allah, etc.
So does this preconceived idea of yours dictate that you spout off about stuff you know nothing about? I've never understood that part.

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Their (typical humanists) training prevents them from even considering the possibility of a higher intelligence, by whatever name, creating humans, or any life on earth for that matter, no matter what the evidence really shows. Everything has evolved by accident, by chance to them, to which I disagree.
You seem to be painting with a pretty broad brush, here. You have made at least three errors of fact in those two sentences, and at least two of inference.

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Yes, there are many who have examined the fossils and came to the conclusion that australos was bipedal. There are many others who also have examined the fossils, and they admit that there is not enough evidence to be able to conclude true bipedal locomotion in other than Homo species, meaning from Homo erectus on, especially in the sense or manner that Homo sapiens walk. Others still totally dispute it. Chimps, as an example, walk on two legs on occasion, but they are not considered bipedal.
BZZZZZTT!! Sorry. Wrong answer. It seems that your preconceptions have managed to blind you to reality (or at least, severely compromise your ability to read…); as you have abundantly demonstrated throughout, you have no clue as to what the actual debates are about, and yet you blithely carry on as if you know what you are talking about. Is humiliating yourself in public a prerequisite to creationism?

Quote:
There is also not enough evidence to truly state that australos are the ancestors of Homo sapiens. So my point is that one should not flat out say we are absolutely descended from apes, because there is no conclusive evidence to support that statement.
Ah, well…you have conflated two issues, here. The first is a) DID humans descend from ape-like ancestors? The answer is: absolutely. The evidence, from a diverse range of disciplines, is unequivocal about that.

The second is: b) WHICH species of australo did we descend from? That is a harder question to answer because fossils don't come out of the ground with genealogies attached. We can, and do, construct some pretty solid hypotheses, however, and much of the ongoing work in paleoanthropology is in testing those hypotheses. It is specious, and quite wrong, though, to pretend that lack of evidence for the exact ancestor is the same thing as lack of evidence that humans evolved. The latter hasn't been an issue for over 100 years.

Quote:
Bait: Nope…I meant that they are ape as in like chimps, gorillas, oragutans, rhesus.

Deb: Australos share features with humans that they do not share with chimps

Bait: Like what…be specific. The fact they have bones?
Sarcasm gets you nowhere. Are you asking because you actually want to know, or are you intending to completely ignore whatever evidence you get?

Quote:
Bait: Deep….but I agree, and humans (Homo sapiens) are humans, not Australos.
Well duh….

Quote:
It has been suggested however that they are the ancestors of pigmy chimps.
Not lately…..

Quote:
Explain also, the startling discovery of a Homo sapien mandible aged 2.3 million years, coded A.L. 666-1 unearthed in Hader, Ethiopia. "..(D. Johanson, Blake
Edgar, From Lucy to Language, p.169)and why this is never brought up?
I addressed this faux pas in another post. I'll link to it here rather than go over it all again. It's the third post down.

<a href="http://iidb.org/cgi-bin/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic&f=58&t=000250&p=8" target="_blank">http://iidb.org/cgi-bin/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic&f=58&t=000250&p=8</a>

Quote:
Bait: The quote concerning the Laughlin study comes from a book called "Evolution Deceit" by Harum Yahya, which quotes from a reference to "Marvin Lubenow, Bones of Contention, Grand Rapids, Baker, 1992. p. 136.

Oh, and the "Neanderthal nonsense" in part comes from "The Neanderthal Brain: What Was Primitive", American Journal of Physical Anthropology Supplement, Vol 12, 1991, p. 94.

(whew)

Gotta run, will get back to you on the rest later. It's been a pleasure though.

Bests,
Ron
Oh great. A creationist quoting a creationist who cites another creationist. I'm sorry I asked….

Looking forward to the next installment….

Deb

[ March 31, 2002: Message edited by: Ergaster ]</p>
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Old 03-31-2002, 12:40 PM   #193
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Only one word: WOW !!!

This is a stonker of a thread (at least the last couple of pages). Bait, thanks ever so much for playing the 'straight man' that allows Ergaster and Oolon to land so many punches. I understand a lot more now about the details of Australopitheci and how they compare to apes and humans.

Impressive stuff.

fG
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Old 03-31-2002, 03:25 PM   #194
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Ergaster, thank you for going to the trouble to respond in detail. I find it very interesting to see what the anatomical evidence is.

It's interesting to think of the Piltdown hoax in this context. It was essentially a composite of a human cranium and an orangutan jawbone, with some filing down to fit and some staining to make the bones look old.

The first "find", in 1905, aroused lots of skepticism that it was a composite, but many of the skeptics were quieted by the second "find" in 1915. The same accidental composite happening twice was too much for coincidence.

The reverse combination -- upright walking with a smaller brain -- was what the real fossils had manifest in the 1930's and 1940's, and Piltdown got viewed as an oddball case and even illegitimate by some paleoanthropologists.

It might be interesting to collect opinion on Piltdown between the "finding" of these "fossils" and their exposure. From what I recall of it, its biggest supporters were British, maybe out of "we want one too" sentiment, while paleoanthropologists elsewhere were more skeptical. However, it was not the fault of any British paleoanthropologist that Britain had been covered by a few kilometers of glacier for much of the last 2 million years.
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Old 03-31-2002, 06:09 PM   #195
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Deb, I want to have your baby. <img src="graemlins/notworthy.gif" border="0" alt="[Not Worthy]" />
No wait, that's impossible. How 'bout I just
buy you a beer, eh?
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Old 04-02-2002, 01:01 AM   #196
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Hi Ergaster! Just wanted to add my own ‘Wow!’ and <img src="graemlins/notworthy.gif" border="0" alt="[Not Worthy]" /> Superb posts. Only problem: I suspect that Ron has scarpered.

Should he still be around, there’s just one bit I’d like to emphasise.

Quote:
Originally posted by Ergaster:

<strong>By the way: compared to all other animals, only humans and the apes have a shoulder joint that allows for complete rotation of the arm while holding it above our heads, along with a broad thorax that places our shoulder blades at the back instead of on the sides. Apes have this enormous flexibility because of their origins in arboreal settings. Now why should we have exactly the same anatomy and flexibility of the thorax and shoulder?</strong>
This, I think, is very important. This shoulder ability is called (IIRC) brachiation. It’s the reason tennis players can serve and cricketers can bowl as they do. And it is why apes can swing from their arms below branches. It is only found in apes and man. We are clearly ‘designed’ with this same shoulder mobility.

Now, if we were created as bipeds, why on earth do we need this particular arrangement? I suppose one could get panglossian and say that the creator wanted us to be able to play cricket. But if so, there are countless other features demonstrated in the natural world we might benefit from too, but which we don’t have.

Which leads me to another bit of Ron’s that got overlooked in the flurry of A’pith stuff:

Quote:
I had said:

Equally, why, in millions of years, have we not evolved the heat-sensing abilities of rattlesnakes, the hearing range of dogs, the olfactory abilities of moths, the taste/olfactory sensitivity of sharks, the visual acuity of birds of prey, bat-like echolocation to see in the dark or a whale’s ability to hold its breath? [...]

Ron’s response:

Why not indeed? Your helping me my friend...answer your own questions...why haven't we?
Quite how that helps you is anyone’s guess. You’re the one claiming that we were separately created. That would leave the creator free to incorporate into the pinnacle of his creation as many Good Ideas as would fit. Yet in all these senses we are either far less efficient than these others, or else do not possess them at all. We are unnecessarily limited. And we are limited in just the ways we would expect if decent with modification were the answer. You could as well ask why sheep can’t see right in front of their noses, and so couldn’t judge the distance from one branch to another. They can’t because they almost never need to. It is more use to them to watch for predators all around themselves. Evolution can only work with what’s available at each generation, and will only improve things if the ‘improvement’ is of some benefit.

There is no pressing need for an arboreal creature to smell prey or to hear the high squeaks of small mammals some miles away, to hear the low rumbles elephants use, to taste traces of blood in water, to see infrared, ultraviolet or tiny movements on the ground hundreds of feet below, to tear raw meat with our teeth. We do have plenty of features which are useful for our (former) lifestyle: binocular vision for branch-to-branch distance judging, we can smell well enough to judge if food is spoiled, we have colour vision to judge the ripeness of fruit, and so on, and above all, we have intelligence, which allows us to make up for these ‘deficiencies’ should we need to.

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You have it backwards. The question should be, why have we accelerated away from the apes in this capacity?

But then, we have accelerated in intelligence only….everything else we have gone backwards, regressed in speed, strength, teeth, hair, most of our natural weapons and defenses have become less in comparison to apes…opposite to what natural selection would normally dictate. Our species should have gone extinct long ago, but we haven't...instead we're on top of the food chain. Explain that, if you can. Are you sure apes are not evolved from man?
Nope, you still have it backwards. Why would a creator create something so feeble? To repeat my point, given a free hand to model things however he wished, a creator could reduce starvation by allowing us to photosynthesise, made our brains grow even faster after birth and so saved women from the numerous dangers of birthing such a huge head, and let us appreciate flowers even more by seeing in ultraviolet.... and so on in a near-endless list. As to these 'regressions'...

-- Speed? I’m damn sure I could outrun a chimp if it had to run bipedally. Natural selection says the advantages of having your hands free outweighed the disadvantage of not using them for locomotion. It may catch me up on all fours... but It’ll be me holding a sharpened stick when it gets to me.

-- Strength? For what? If you’re strong enough to fashion said sharp stick, you can achieve more with it than you can by brute strength alone. Could a physically much-stronger-than-humans group of chimps bring down a mammoth?

-- Teeth? Teeth for what? A chimp’s teeth are just as feeble as ours at grinding up large quantities of plant matter, compared to a cow; nor can they mince raw flesh as well as cats’ carnassials. Since chimps do in fact eat both raw meat and plant matter, should they not have gone extinct? If, say, the teeth of Homo habilis were so puny that they should have led to its extinction, then these puny teeth would have killed the lineage stone dead at the start, and we shouldn’t find so many of them as fossils. They evidently did work well enough – and that’s all that counts. And you don’t need sharp teeth if you’ve got a sharp stone, and a sharp stone is more replaceable, and you can have different sizes for different tasks.

-- Hair? But we do have hair on top, where the sun is hottest on an upright creature. Having less elsewhere lets you cool down quicker with sweat. Nor do our infants need to cling to it – we have our hands free to hold them. Funny, though, how babies have a grasping reflex at birth, though there’s no hair to grasp, isn’t it?

-- Most of our natural defences and weapons? Like, being able to plan and work co-operatively, to use our hands to pick up weapons, to see further than any quadruped of a similar size, and so on, are of no use in this regard?

-- Apes evolved from man? And, uh, ‘regressed’ in intelligence? Once again, a fundamental lack of understanding. Evolution isn’t about progress. Nothing now alive is ‘better’ or ‘worse’ than anything else alive too. By merely being here, it demonstrates that every single one of its ancestors had whatever it took to survive and reproduce in its environment.

So Ron, are you coming back?

TTFN, Oolon
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Old 04-02-2002, 12:20 PM   #197
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Deb,

"..." (i.e. words fail) <img src="graemlins/notworthy.gif" border="0" alt="[Not Worthy]" />

-Baloo
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