"GondwanaTalks Verhaegen" https://www.gondwanatalks.com/l/the-waterside-hypothesis-wading-led-to-upright-walking-in-early-humans/
What's missing is a "smoking gun" of Asian littoral fossils with hominids more human-like
than African present-day apes.
Peter Nyikos wrote:
What's missing is a "smoking gun" of Asian littoral fossils with hominids more human-like
than African present-day apes.
Well Harpmun, the real Harshmun, used to babble endlessly about "Ghost Lineages." He had no idea what he meant by it but consider this:
Chimps descend from a bipedal ancestor. Sahelanthropus tchadensis dates further back
than the conventional dating for the LCA and was perhaps MORE bipedal than at least
some Australopithecines... judging from the foramen magnum. There's clearly a gap there.
25? Ma +-"monkey"like cf Cercopithecoidea & Platyrrhini: arboreal: mostly pronograde, 4-handed, tail+<250? ka: H.sapiens: predom.walking (soon extinct?)
2.5? Ma +-"ape"like cf australopiths-apes: aquarboreal: more orthograde, broad build, tail-loss
250? ka "aq.ape"like: H.erectus cs: (parttime)shellfish-diving: brain+, pachyosteoscl., Ind.Ocean-shores
And, most "Out of Asia" aficionados I've come across favor Sundaland as the point of
origins. And it makes a lot of sense, being both equatorial and just low enough in elevation
that groups were going to periodically find themselves flooded out, stranded. But that
same flooding would have washed away or at least buried much of it's history... the
Glacial/Interglacial cycle... it was Ground Zero for Toba... hit mighty hard by that asteroid(s)
event(s) of around 800k years ago... lots of more modest volcanic activity...
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1040618211006884 Remember: Toba is in what is now Indonesia -- what was Sundaland! This cite is talking
about what the Toba eruption buried IN INDIA!
Maybe it preserved something?
So a lot of the "Out of Asia" evidence -- assuming it exists -- is out to sea, and buried
under sediments laid down by volcanic activity.
Most of the "Aquatic Ape" evidence would be somewhere beneath the waves right now,
if it exists.
And nobody looks.
The higgs boson particle costs science $13 billion to "Discover." Imagine what a
legitimate scientific search for Aquatic Ape -- human origins -- could do with that
kind of money. It's reasonable. would argue that human origins is worth AT LEAST
as much money.
Peter Nyikos wrote:
What's missing is a "smoking gun" of Asian littoral fossils with hominids more human-like
than African present-day apes.
Well Harpmun, the real Harshmun, used to babble endlessly about "Ghost Lineages."
He had no idea what he meant by it but consider this:
Chimps descend from a bipedal ancestor. Sahelanthropus tchadensis dates further back
than the conventional dating for the LCA and was perhaps MORE bipedal than at least
some Australopithecines... judging from the foramen magnum. There's clearly a gap there.
And, most "Out of Asia" aficionados I've come across favor Sundaland as the point of
origins. And it makes a lot of sense, being both equatorial and just low enough in elevation
that groups were going to periodically find themselves flooded out, stranded. But that
same flooding would have washed away or at least buried much of it's history... the
Glacial/Interglacial cycle... it was Ground Zero for Toba... hit mighty hard by that asteroid(s)
event(s) of around 800k years ago... lots of more modest volcanic activity...
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1040618211006884
Remember: Toba is in what is now Indonesia -- what was Sundaland! This cite is talking
about what the Toba eruption buried IN INDIA!
Maybe it preserved something?
So a lot of the "Out of Asia" evidence -- assuming it exists -- is out to sea, and buried
under sediments laid down by volcanic activity.
Most of the "Aquatic Ape" evidence would be somewhere beneath the waves right now,
if it exists.
And nobody looks.
The higgs boson particle costs science $13 billion to "Discover." Imagine what a
legitimate scientific search for Aquatic Ape -- human origins -- could do with that
kind of money. It's reasonable. would argue that human origins is worth AT LEAST
as much money.
Op vrijdag 24 maart 2023 om 09:52:55 UTC+1 schreef JTEM:
Peter Nyikos wrote:"missing", Peter??
What's missing is a "smoking gun" of Asian littoral fossils with hominids more human-like
than African present-day apes.
Not missing at all, to the contrary:
early-Pleistocene H.erectus at Java was littoral:
e.g. my book p.220:antilopes, tijgers, hondachtigen en apen.
- Het Mojokerto-kind (~1,8 Ma?) kwam uit een brede delta vol zeepokken, koralen, zee- en zoetwaterschelpen wijzend op mangroves, strand en moddervlaktes, met fossiele botten van olifanten, neushoorns en nijlpaarden, zwijnen, tapirs, buffels en
- Het schedeldak en dijbot van Trinil lagen volgens José Joordens bij eetbare zoetwaterschelpen (Pseudodon en Elongaria).
- En Sangiran-17 (~1,6 Ma?), de meest intacte schedel op Java, kwam uit een brakwatermoeras aan de kust."
We must discern our different evolutionary phases: very schematically:
25? Ma +-"monkey"like cf Cercopithecoidea & Platyrrhini: arboreal: mostly pronograde, 4-handed, tail+
2.5? Ma +-"ape"like cf australopiths-apes: aquarboreal: more orthograde, broad build, tail-loss
250? ka "aq.ape"like: H.erectus cs: (parttime)shellfish-diving: brain+, pachyosteoscl., Ind.Ocean-shores
<250? ka: H.sapiens: predom.walking (soon extinct?)
On Sunday, March 26, 2023 at 5:41:29 AM UTC-4, marc verhaegen wrote:
Op vrijdag 24 maart 2023 om 09:52:55 UTC+1 schreef JTEM:
What's missing is a "smoking gun" of Asian littoral fossils with hominids more human-like
than African present-day apes.
"missing", Peter?? Not missing at all, to the contrary: early-Pleistocene H.erectus at Java was littoral:
Not littoral for "Pithecanthropus" and "Solo man". Riparian. Banks of Solo River.
antilopes, tijgers, hondachtigen en apen.e.g. my book p.220:
- Het Mojokerto-kind (~1,8 Ma?) kwam uit een brede delta vol zeepokken, koralen, zee- en zoetwaterschelpen wijzend op mangroves, strand en moddervlaktes, met fossiele botten van olifanten, neushoorns en nijlpaarden, zwijnen, tapirs, buffels en
- Het schedeldak en dijbot van Trinil lagen volgens José Joordens bij eetbare zoetwaterschelpen (Pseudodon en Elongaria).
- En Sangiran-17 (~1,6 Ma?), de meest intacte schedel op Java, kwam uit een brakwatermoeras aan de kust."
Your dating clashes with what is at the end of the Wikipedia entry, and there is no mentiondated came from a pumice bed located 20 metres (66 ft) below the one above which the Mojokerto skullcap was found. The geological horizon immediately under the fossil – Morwood calls it "Pumice Horizon 5" – dates back to 1.49 Ma, whereas the one just
of anything suggesting "littoral". https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mojokerto_child
Excerpt: In 2003, a paper published by a team led by archeologist Mike Morwood presented 1.49 ± 0.13 Ma as the latest possible date, based on "fission-track dating of single zircon grains".[1] Morwood argued that the rock samples Curtis and Swisher
[deletia of things familiar from earlier posts]
We must discern our different evolutionary phases: very schematically:
25? Ma +-"monkey"like cf Cercopithecoidea & Platyrrhini: arboreal: mostly pronograde, 4-handed, tail+
2.5? Ma +-"ape"like cf australopiths-apes: aquarboreal: more orthograde, broad build, tail-loss
Is there a "smoking gun" here? it's before the first ice age, isn't it?
250? ka "aq.ape"like: H.erectus cs: (parttime)shellfish-diving: brain+, pachyosteoscl., Ind.Ocean-shores.
See my pessimistic reply to JTEM less than an hour ago.
<250? ka: H.sapiens: predom.walking (soon extinct?)
On Friday, March 24, 2023 at 4:52:55 AM UTC-4, JTEM wrote:
Peter Nyikos wrote:
What's missing is a "smoking gun" of Asian littoral fossils with hominids more human-like
than African present-day apes.
Sadly, it looks like we will never find them, as will be clear below.
Well Harpmun, the real Harshmun, used to babble endlessly about "Ghost Lineages."
Yes, and if Harshman [or "Hirschmann" as he once told me when I called him "Harschmann"]
really cared about sci.bio.paleontology any more, he'd be here
saying that your entire "coastal dispersal" lineage is a "ghost lineage." And, contrary to what you say below, he had a very simple meaning attached to it.
He had no idea what he meant by it but consider this:
Chimps descend from a bipedal ancestor. Sahelanthropus tchadensis dates further back
than the conventional dating for the LCA and was perhaps MORE bipedal than at least
some Australopithecines... judging from the foramen magnum. There's clearly a gap there.
Especially if chimps did NOT descend from S.t.
And, most "Out of Asia" aficionados I've come across favor Sundaland as the point of
origins. And it makes a lot of sense, being both equatorial and just low enough in elevation
that groups were going to periodically find themselves flooded out, stranded. But that
same flooding would have washed away or at least buried much of it's history... the
Glacial/Interglacial cycle... it was Ground Zero for Toba... hit mighty hard by that asteroid(s)
event(s) of around 800k years ago... lots of more modest volcanic activity...
What asteroid event are you talking about? Far earlier than the Toba event, of course.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1040618211006884
Fortunately, my institutional membership [see virtual .sig at end]
allowed me to bypass the paywall.
Fascinating article, giving a date of 74,000 years ago for the explosion. The clarity of the on-site pictures reminds me of the posts Inyo does
here every few months. A treat for the eyes in both cases.
Remember: Toba is in what is now Indonesia -- what was Sundaland! This cite is talking
about what the Toba eruption buried IN INDIA!> How come it didn't bury "Java man" and "Solo man" even deeper?
Maybe it preserved something?
So a lot of the "Out of Asia" evidence -- assuming it exists -- is out to sea, and buried
under sediments laid down by volcanic activity.
Most of the "Aquatic Ape" evidence would be somewhere beneath the waves right now,
if it exists. And nobody looks.
Hard to know where to look. The tsunami might have washed the human ancestors
out to sea or pushed them out on the land before the ash arrived.
But rising sea levels at the end of the last ice age would have put them far out to sea anyway,
as you noted.
The higgs boson particle costs science $13 billion to "Discover." Imagine what a
legitimate scientific search for Aquatic Ape -- human origins -- could do with that
kind of money. It's reasonable. would argue that human origins is worth AT LEAST
as much money.
I've already commented on the relative importance of these things, and physicists
knew exactly "where" to look. We haven't a clue, as I said above.
Peter Nyikos
Professor, Dept. of Mathematics -- standard disclaimer--
Univ. of South Carolina at Columbia
http://people.math.sc.edu/nyikos
Peter Nyikos wrote:
What's missing is a "smoking gun" of Asian littoral fossils with hominids more human-like
than African present-day apes.
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