Re: Cinese view




"Lee Olsen" <paleocity@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1166485719.397274.271860@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

Marc Verhaegen wrote:
"Rich Travsky" <traRvEsky@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
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http://www.lamma.net/

HAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHA

Ridiculous answer.


Not nearly so rediculous as....

"There's not the slightest evidence that our ancestors ever ran over
your savannas. Zero. Nada." Marc Verhaegon
ROTFL

http://book-of-thoth.com/article804.html

Lee... thanks for the reference and info..... and i don't dispute it at
all... but it is interesting to me that Potts says this group became
extinct?
"But dramatic climate and environmental changes known to have occurred
during those times forced groups to move together again, and perhaps drove
some into extinction. Perhaps there were lots of "short experiments" -
species that never really quite made it, Potts said"

and that this fossil evidence was found on the volcanic ridge and not on the
plains. I wonder if this is similiar to the NA's in the Appalachians...
they would have "camps" up in the mountains to get meat and lithic material.

"It had carnivore bite marks on the left brow ridge, Potts said. "Quite
possibly this is how the individual died. It was walking along or near the
volcanic ridge leading up to the highlands (a safer nighttime place to be
than by the water's edge in the lowland) and it didn't quite make it.""

regards,
chap


"The entire area was a grassy plain, filled with grazing zebra and
very large grass-eating baboons, along with grazing elephants and huge
pigs," Potts said. "The toolmakers made extensive use of the
volcanic rocks up on Mount Olorgesailie and surrounding highlands -
we've identified 14 different types of volcanic rocks that they
chipped into handaxes."


"Vegitation in the Olduvai basin was cheifly bush, scrub and open
grassland. Trees and perhaps strips of forests fringed the meandering
rivers of the western alluvial plain and the main drainageway. The
climate was semi-arid while beds III an IV were deposited.....the
Norkilili Member...semi-arid. Very likely the climate was drier than
that of Beds III-IV and rather like that of the present (Hay 1994:11
Olduvai Gorge Vol. 5)."


Could be expected from a closed-minded person...

Think you will ever understand English?



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