Re: With birds and lions Re: mud flat



On Mar 2, 5:14 am, Paul Crowley <dsfdsfd...@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
RichTravsky wrote:

http://sciencenow.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/2009/226/1







 In addition to finding the human footprints, the
researchers also found tracks of ancient animals,
from birds to lions, that provide a "snapshot in time
of what animals were on the landscape," says
paleoanthropologist and co-author John Harris of
Rutgers University, New Brunswick. The new glimpse of
the footpaths of animals and humans complement
earlier studies that reveal the anatomy and behavior
of H. erectus, suggesting that as it evolved modern
body proportions, it also increased its home range
and began competing with carnivores for carcasses on
the savanna, says Harris.

That must be why we love rotten meat
-- preferring it to fresh, just like hyena,
wolf and dog.  It must be why we have
such an excellent sense of smell.
And it must be why we have so many
savanna adaptations -- conserving
water and salts.

What rotten meat are you babbling about?

Species that compete with carnivores for
carcasses on the savanna are all adapted
to eat carcasses that have been rotting
in the sun for days or even weeks.

The corpse of a large animal (such as an
elephant) may be guarded by a group of
predators for many days, who can only
consume part of it.  The rest will often
go so rotten that no mammal can
consume it

Or, maybe, under your scenario, this
is where the hominids come in.

Who knows?  Who cares?

You don't --either one.

Paul.
-----------------------------------------------
"Any attempt to get you to be honest
is self-defeating..." Pauly - 09/28/2008
.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: Homo & molluscs
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    (sci.anthropology.paleo)
  • Re: Homo & molluscs
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  • Re: Homo & molluscs
    ... > I see is a fast dispersal of Homo to Java & Algeria. ... Any reason why you think these animals could not have lived next to ... >> that contradicts our scenario? ... that is the factual savanna evidence. ...
    (sci.anthropology.paleo)