To: razzle; lizol; Coyoteman
Neanderthal fossil skulls have bigger brains than modern humans and could be dressed up to look like a corporate executive today instead of the brute we see described by darwinists, either way its a human. [pinging Coyote since he knows about this stuff professionally]
It's my understanding (don't have time to research right now) that Neanderthals had a differently-shaped rib cage. If this is so, why not produce an x-ray of a living person with that sort of bone structure? I've never seen such a thing.
58 posted on
10/24/2006 12:37:30 PM PDT by
Virginia-American
(Don't bring a comic book to an encyclopedia fight)
To: Virginia-American
It's my understanding (don't have time to research right now) that Neanderthals had a differently-shaped rib cage. If this is so, why not produce an x-ray of a living person with that sort of bone structure? I've never seen such a thing. We now have a significant amount of DNA from Neanderthal sources. The analysis is not complete, but any interbreeding in the last 100,000 years is somewhere between extremely unlikely and impossible.
61 posted on
10/24/2006 12:41:57 PM PDT by
js1138
(The absolute seriousness of someone who is terminally deluded.)
To: Virginia-American
"It's my understanding that Neanderthals had a differently-shaped rib cage."
I saw the same "make believe" Science documentary on Discovery channel (or PBS) this week about Neanderthals. The darwinist-in-charge even admitted no complete skeletons have been found and he then proceeded to take bits and pieces from many sources and wire them together - and then proclaimed "this creature" had wider ribs and no waist. What a load of BS. One other researcher said that "this person" was well equipped for the cold or something. Speculation by people who already know the answer is dangerous. All in all the documentary gave me the impression that the Neanderthal was similar to the aborigines in Australia but heavier.
71 posted on
10/24/2006 3:02:13 PM PDT by
razzle
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson