This thread has been locked, it will not receive new replies.
|
Locked on 01/16/2007 9:23:15 PM PST by Religion Moderator, reason:
Poor behavior
|
Skip to comments.
Study: Primates may have come along earlier than thought
The Gainesville Sun ^
| 16 Jan 2007
| JACK STRIPLING
Posted on 01/16/2007 12:19:26 PM PST by ASA Vet
Primates that eventually gave rise to human beings came on the scene shortly after the extinction of dinosaurs, a full 10 million years earlier than the fossil record has ever conclusively illustrated, according to a new paper co-authored by a University of Florida faculty member.
(Excerpt) Read more at gainesville.com ...
TOPICS: Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: crevo; crevolist; evolution; primates; scienceisalwayswrong; sciencewrongagain
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-20, 21-40, 41-42 next last
1
posted on
01/16/2007 12:19:30 PM PST
by
ASA Vet
To: ASA Vet
And some of them have regressed....all you have to do is look at the left side of the isle
2
posted on
01/16/2007 12:22:36 PM PST
by
stm
(Believe 1% of what you hear in the drive-by media and take half of that with a grain of salt)
To: ASA Vet
GEICO commercial????
To: ASA Vet
4
posted on
01/16/2007 12:26:27 PM PST
by
Squawk 8888
(Pluto's been marginalized! Call the ACLU!)
To: Squawk 8888
First one to hurl an insult or quote unsubstantiated material (from either side) loses.
5
posted on
01/16/2007 12:28:43 PM PST
by
SlowBoat407
(A living insult to islam since 1959)
To: stm
Turned into lawyers they did --
6
posted on
01/16/2007 12:30:48 PM PST
by
BenLurkin
To: ASA Vet
7
posted on
01/16/2007 12:30:50 PM PST
by
Red Badger
(New! HeadOn Hemorrhoid Medication for Liberals!.........Apply directly to forehead.........)
To: ASA Vet
Further evidence that evolutionists, after so many years, still have it wrong.
8
posted on
01/16/2007 12:31:18 PM PST
by
Theo
(Global warming "scientists." Pro-evolution "scientists." They're both wrong.)
To: SlowBoat407
quote unsubstantiated material Might that be just regular old common Bull Sh--?
9
posted on
01/16/2007 12:32:05 PM PST
by
org.whodat
(Never let the facts get in the way of a good assumption.)
To: Theo
They were off by 10 million years. You are still off by a few billion years.
10
posted on
01/16/2007 12:34:51 PM PST
by
Blue State Insurgent
(Those who know the truth need to speak out against these kinds of myths, and lies, and distortions..)
To: Theo
There very little of what I'd call evidence in that article.
11
posted on
01/16/2007 12:35:35 PM PST
by
SengirV
To: ASA Vet
The fossil record has never shown primates were evolutionists aunts and uncles. The articles starts out with an unproven statement and states it as fact. The "fossil record" also shows that the lake sturgeon hasn't 'evolved' in the least for 10,000 million years, doesn't this prove evolution doesn't happen? I just love the tangled web evolution theory has woven. every new discovery contradicts another.
To: Nathan Zachary
lawyers haven't even started to evolve/
13
posted on
01/16/2007 12:37:50 PM PST
by
stockpirate
(John Kerry & FBI files ==> http://www.freerepublic.com/~stockpirate/)
To: Nathan Zachary
Just because some species have existed relatively unchanged for a few tens of millions of years doesn't mean evolution doesn't happen. There is nothing about genetic drift or natural selection that would force ALL species to evolve.
Also, your 10,000 million year unchanged sturgeon "factoid" is only off by about 9,900 million years.
14
posted on
01/16/2007 12:42:56 PM PST
by
Sols
To: Sols
And from what kind of monkey did you evolve?
15
posted on
01/16/2007 12:47:49 PM PST
by
gedeon3
To: All
16
posted on
01/16/2007 12:48:54 PM PST
by
sionnsar
(†trad-anglican.faithweb.com†|Iran Azadi| 5yst3m 0wn3d - it's N0t Y0ur5 (SONY) | UN: Useless Nations)
To: Nathan Zachary
The "fossil record" also shows that the lake sturgeon hasn't 'evolved' in the least for 10,000 million years,Given that 10,000 million years is about twice as old as the solar system, I'm a bit incredulous. But you raise an important question -- why do some organisms appear to change very little over long periods of time whereas other organisms change dramatically. The answer is the idea of a niche -- if an organism is well adapted to its particlar environment, no force will push it to change. In fact, evolutionary forces will work against it changing significantly. This is all the more true when you're talking about large populations.
17
posted on
01/16/2007 12:50:29 PM PST
by
Alter Kaker
("Whatever tears one sheds, in the end one always blows one's nose." - Heie)
To: Theo
Further evidence that evolutionists, after so many years, still have it wrong. How so? Just curious.
To: gedeon3
Do you know what the difference between an ape and a monkey is? It is not merely a pedantic question. You will be most excited to learn that my mother was a great ape and I am, in fact, a great ape.
The answer to your question is, to the best of my knoweledge, homo antecessor. There might be another hominin in there before sapiens, I do not know.
19
posted on
01/16/2007 12:56:12 PM PST
by
Sols
To: gedeon3
And from what kind of monkey did you evolve?Hominoids (a superfamily that includes modern apes and humans) split off from old world monkeys about 20 million years ago. The most likely common ancestor is Proconsul.
20
posted on
01/16/2007 12:57:09 PM PST
by
Alter Kaker
("Whatever tears one sheds, in the end one always blows one's nose." - Heie)
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-20, 21-40, 41-42 next last
Disclaimer:
Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual
posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its
management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the
exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson