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This nigga shat in the shower and stomped it down the drain
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2021-07-05 at 11:49 PM UTC
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2021-07-05 at 11:57 PM UTCChing chong bing bong bruh
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2021-07-06 at 12:19 AM UTC
Originally posted by AngryIVer No, had you bothered to read what I posted you would see it's actually fact.
mitochondrial eve is based on the supposition that it came from a geological place called africa.
but millions of years ago when earth was in its early age, everywhere was africa.when earth was a pangea, the entire earth was africa.
the right way to look at mitochondriac eve is that it is the same throughout the world initially, and evolved elsewhere around the world except in africa where they remain unevolved throughout the millennias.
because africa is inconducive to evolution. -
2021-07-06 at 12:20 AM UTC
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2021-07-06 at 12:20 AM UTC
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2021-07-06 at 12:21 AM UTC
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2021-07-06 at 12:26 AM UTC
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2021-07-06 at 12:34 AM UTC
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2021-07-06 at 2:01 PM UTC
Originally posted by vindicktive vinny mitochondrial eve is based on the supposition that it came from a geological place called africa.
but millions of years ago when earth was in its early age, everywhere was africa.when earth was a pangea, the entire earth was africa.
the right way to look at mitochondriac eve is that it is the same throughout the world initially, and evolved elsewhere around the world except in africa where they remain unevolved throughout the millennias.
because africa is inconducive to evolution.
The world wasnt africa 100-200k years ago which is when modern humans are said to have arrived or when hjumans supposedly migrated out of africa, it was a separate continent afaik. -
2021-07-06 at 2:41 PM UTC
Originally posted by Kev The world wasnt africa 100-200k years ago which is when modern humans are said to have arrived or when hjumans supposedly migrated out of africa, it was a separate continent afaik.
humans has been around far longer than that.
it is possible humans have existed side by side dinasours and it is also possible that humans had undergone many episodes of near extinction before evolving and thriving again after rapid and abrupt environmental changes.
there are just too many things we dont know yet and we dont yet have mtdna of dinasours. new specieses of homos are also being found on a daily basis and just the other day they claimed to have found a "new" homo which they dubbed homo longi.
and to say that we have a definitive working theory of who we are and where we came from is a goatse-tier overstretch.
of scientifique immagination. -
2021-07-06 at 2:46 PM UTCif we existed alongside dinosaurs, we wouldve found homonim bones alongside theirs by now and we didnt so its a safe bet that theory is moot.
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2021-07-06 at 2:53 PM UTC
Originally posted by Kev if we existed alongside dinosaurs, we wouldve found homonim bones alongside theirs by now and we didnt so its a safe bet that theory is moot.
just because you find corn husks in the sewer doesnt mean you'll also find used toilet paper.
human are small and filmsy, they biodegrade easily and they are easily crush at the strata depth dinasours are usually found. -
2021-07-06 at 3:04 PM UTCbullshit we found small dinosaurs too that were not crushed, the reason their bones are buried so deep is because they died millions of years earlier, guess how we estimate the age of the bones in the first place? duh
not all of us died in a place where we so easily biograde, theres a reason 100% of dinosaur bones were found in a depth that suggests they died 65 million years ago and 100% of homonid bones found at a depth that suggests a number not earlier than 200 thousand years.
there are things way flimsier than humans discovered every day. -
2021-07-06 at 3:14 PM UTC
Originally posted by Kev bullshit we found small dinosaurs too that were not crushed, the reason their bones are buried so deep is because they died millions of years earlier, guess how we estimate the age of the bones in the first place? duh
not all of us died in a place where we so easily biograde, theres a reason 100% of dinosaur bones were found in a depth that suggests they died 65 million years ago and 100% of homonid bones found at a depth that suggests a number not earlier than 200 thousand years.
there are things way flimsier than humans discovered every day.
can you guarantee we wont ever find human remains as old as dinasours ? -
2021-07-06 at 3:19 PM UTCno but its very unlikely, we wouldve found them by now. you arent talking about a small margin of error which is typical, you are talking about something way off the charts.
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2021-07-06 at 3:29 PM UTC
Originally posted by Kev no but its very unlikely, we wouldve found them by now. you arent talking about a small margin of error which is typical, you are talking about something way off the charts.
everything seems to be way of the charts on small charts.
on a big enough chart the margin of error of any and everything seems miniscule.