If they find any yellow teeth, it`ll be certain they`re Brits.
Paging Quatermass.
Giant grasshoppers?
Is that the prophet? He’s a long way from Arabia.
Wow... a million years. In Britain. Any recoverable DNA could be the hughest and seriest thing ever.
Actual photo
Typical Norwich fan, Saturday night, 4 pints in.
Nonsense. Key elements of a silly story: âbelieve they have found,â âone million-year-old,â âHappisburgh could be the first place where humans settled in Britain,â sabre-toothed tigersâthey are catsânot âtigers,â âthe early humans living at the time would also have been able to walk to mainland Europe as one million years ago, Kent was connected to Germany.â Not one aspect of this story is scientifically provable. ÂBelieve is a word delegated to religions, not a scientific term as the left would have us Âbelieve. Yes, I know—gonna’ get hell for this. And “hell?” What does the left know about it despite their usage? And the picture with the story? They want us to take it seriously as if it is a true rendition of a prehistoric individual. This is laughable, but unfortunately the low information crowd will accept it on “faith.”Â
A million years is a long time.
Maybe it is a ka-jillion.
Is that before or after the extraterrestrials modified their DNA to make them suitable for gold mining?
So ancient man was the dudes hanging out doing drugs and asking for money?
underneath a £15-a-night caravan park....
The guys from Top Gear UK must be happy.
They already made a documentary movie about these early British people:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TvkwBmfZAeo
Oh.
That kind of settlement...
Looks like a Kucinich relation.
This guy, long-lost brother of Helen Thomas, looks like he was rode hard and put away wet.
“I’m a simple caveman. Your ways frighten and confuse me...”
>> Scientists now believe that it was the first
Because it’s the oldest one the diggers found...
The site was dated by a scrap of parchment with the words “One Million Years B.C.” and a drawing of a cave woman clad in an oh so brief animal skin.
Sounds like more junk science from the Society for Creative Studies