Dr Adequate
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[swiki]Chromosome 2[/swiki].
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What's his name?If any of you have any questions about the Chimpanzee Genome Project, I am on friendly terms with one of the authors on the paper. He posts infrequently and lurks quite often at CF.
[swiki]Molecular Clocks[/swiki]. I've reused the argument about chimp and human genomes from the chap off CF.
Also, [swiki]Evolution and Falsification[/swiki], just a quick look at one of the more arrantly foolish creationist claims.
What's his name?
Greatcloud said:Evolutions' Hoaxes and Retractions
Below is a summary of some famous discoveries and what eventually became of them.
Greatcloud said:Discovery What was found What it was Java Man 1891-92 by Eugene Dubois in Java on the Solo river. A skull cap, fifty feet away a femur, and, later in another location, three teeth. A hoax. They were the skull of a gibbon and a human leg bone. They were found a year apart but not in the same spot.
Greatcloud said:Piltdown Man Eoanthropous 1911-12, England. Named Eoanthropus Dawsoni (Dawson's Dawn Man). A Hoax discovered in 1953. It was believed for 40 years. It was a fraud by a group of scientists. A human skull and the jaw of an ape were stained to look old.
Greatcloud said:Peking Man China 1920, original bones lost. Found in a cave with thousands of animal bones. The human bones appeared to be cannibalized Bones from a garbage dump. No evidence of transitional forms.
Greatcloud said:Australopithecines The Southern Ape from Africa Most experts say they are all apes.
Greatcloud said:Evolutionists claim that they are our ancestors Lucy 1974, Ethiopia. Australopithecines. A fossil skeleton 40% complete. Bones found miles apart at different depths. The hip was cut and reglued so that it looked like she walked upright Still in dispute but they are apes that were just as bipedal as other monkeys. A fraud was also committed.
Greatcloud said:Rhodesian Man 1921, declared to be one million years old Modern person with dental problems from a modern diet and a hole in his skull from either a bullet or a crossbow (both modern weapons)
Greatcloud said:Taung African Man South Africa 1924, "Skull" A young ape
Taung child was an early human. Not an chimpanzee.However, there was one additional feature to the Taung Child that was not easily explained away as a characteristic of an immature ape. The position of the foramen magnum, or the hole through which the spinal chord connects with the brain, was positioned well to the front of the skull, an adaptation of a bipedal creature whose head would rest atop the neck in a relatively balanced position. Conversely, a quadrupedal ape whose head would rest in front of the neck, would need a foramen magnum positioned to the rear of the head to keep its eyes facing forward, and not down, as it moved. If this truly was a chimpanzee, and not an early human, why the forward positioning of the foramen magnum?
Greatcloud said:Nebraska Man Midwest 1922, Single molar tooth, used as evidence in the Scope's Monkey trial Tooth of an extinct pig. Living specimens of the same pig were found in Paraguay in 1972. It used to be in many museums as proof of evolution.
The last part about Nebraska Man being used in many museums is simply a lie.Creationists often claim that Nebraska Man was used as proof of evolution during the Scopes Monkey Trial in 1925, but this claim is apocryphal. No scientific evidence was presented at the trial. (Some evidence was read into the trial record, but even this did not refer to Nebraska Man.)
Greatcloud said:Nutcracker Man 1959, set of mismatched bones discovered by Louis Leakey The discoverer conceded that it was the skull of an ape
H. rudolphensis, not a human as can be seen in the skull. Paleontologists are open to reclassification, but into another hominid genus, not H. sapiens.Greatcloud said:Skull 1470 1973, 2.8 million year old skull by Richard Leakey A modern person (such as a teen) with a small brain
Greatcloud said:Ramapithicus 1961. A few teeth and a jawbone. From this they deduced that it walked upright. Ancestor of an orangutan.
Greatcloud said:Neanderthal 1908, France-Germany, described as totally human. Deformed vertebra from arthritis. DNA studies show no link to any human groups.
Greatcloud said:Archaeoraptor 1999, China. The missing link between the bird and reptiles Fake. Dinosaur glued to a bird.
Greatcloud said:Archaeopteryx Bones that were thought to be the missing link between the bird and reptiles It is a bird, not a missing link. A complete skeleton and the femur of a bird were later found
Similar in size and shape to a European Magpie, Archaeopteryx could grow to about 0.5 metres (1.6 ft) in length. Despite its small size, broad wings, and ability to fly, Archaeopteryx has more in common with small theropod dinosaurs than it does with modern birds. In particular, it shares the following features with the deinonychosaurs (dromaeosaurs and troodontids): jaws with sharp teeth, three fingers with claws, a long bony tail, hyperextensible second toes ("killing claw"), feathers (which also suggest homeothermy), and various skeletal features.
Greatcloud said:Hobbit (Homo Floresiensis) Flores, Indonesia. Female, 3 feet tall and multiple individuals and animals in a cave. New human species. Lived 18000 years ago. Date of bones ranged from 18000, 37000 and 74000 years A pygmy with a brain shrinking disease. Locals claimed they were short, hairy people called the Abu-Gogo who lived in caves at the time of their grandparents. The 56000 year difference in age suggests an error in our dating methods
Greatcloud said:While it was desperate scientists who perpetrated the hoax, it is still good science that exposed them. However, they have a fatal flaw due to their bias and wishful thinking. There is a distinct lack of credible links between man and ape. They should be all over the place why are there none ?
UnrepentantSinner, that just looks great! Would it perhaps be possible for you to work it into the SkepticWiki so that it does not get buried together with this thread?I know that many of the people posting in this forum are involved in math/science, but I wanted to share a recent reply I gave to a PRATT list on another forum
UnrepentantSinner, that just looks great! Would it perhaps be possible for you to work it into the SkepticWiki so that it does not get buried together with this thread?
I don't have a SW logon, and my wiki-fu is poor, but I suggest the following change:That would be great.
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P.S: I added an article about the [swiki]platypus[/swiki].
These are qualities that the platypus has in common with the other living monotremes, the less famous echidnas, or spiny anteaters.
Dr A, you're doing a really great job and all, but I have to trip you up here.I put in "also known as echidnas" and I took out the bit in the "Anatomy" section where I called it a "duck-billed platypus", because that is one of my bugbears too, I can't think how that got in there.
Thanks.
[swiki]Lateral Gene Transfer[/swiki].
Thanks, I've rewritten that bit for clarity and mentioned that Wolbachia is a bacterium."We have already given the example of Wolbachia, of Agrobacterium, and of yeast as cases of eukaryotes acquiring genetic material from bacteria. "
This line is confusing - Agrobacterium is the bacterium, not the eukaryote, in the example; and the section on Wolbachia doesn't make it clear what it is.
The phrase "duckbilled platypus" is also a personal bugbear of mine, for the reasons you outline in the article. Whenever I hear someone refer to a "duckbilled platypus" I want to reply "as opposed to the other kind..."
wikipedia said:There is no universally agreed upon plural of "platypus" in the English language. Scientists generally use "platypuses" or simply "platypus". Colloquially, "platypi" is also used for the plural, although this is pseudo-Latin;[3] the Greek plural would be "platypodes". Early British settlers called it by many names, such as watermole, duckbill, and duckmole.[3] The name "Platypus" is often prefixed with the adjective "duck-billed" to form Duck-billed Platypus, despite there being only one species of Platypus.[9]
The phrase "duckbilled platypus" is also a personal bugbear of mine, for the reasons you outline in the article. Whenever I hear someone refer to a "duckbilled platypus" I want to reply "as opposed to the other kind..."