justintime said:
Why would humans murder their partners. They interbred with neanderthals, remember.
And the Irish and British interbred. Just because two groups include members that interbreed, doesn't mean they won't kill each other. Today if someone is killed the most likely person to be guilty of it is their lover.
There is nothing that suggests it was the anatomically modern humans that left Africa.
The term "anotomically modern human" has specific meaning in archaeology, anthropology, and all other relevant fields. If you don't know the meaning of the term, you don't know enough to participate in this conversation in a meaningful way.
I just raised the question here.
Dishonestly. It has already been addressed, to raise it again is intended to hide that fact.
You are replacing faulty reasoning with new data, just as they did after holding on to the false assumption neanderthals were apes from early fossil misreadings.
You've demonstrated that you have no idea what we're doing. You've done nothing but spread misinformation, lie, and distort the truth about this topic since you started.
That is a deliberate attempt to distort.
No. It is the facts of the situation. If you don't like it, that's too bad--the facts are not up for debate.
Neanderthals were identified as apes and not humans because their fossils were thought to resembled knuckle walking apes. Later they were classified as humans after scientists realized their mistake.
You've provided no evidence to suggest this is true. MY evidence comes from "Evolution, Time, and Man" and "Darwin's Century", two scholarly textbooks on this exact topic. Both disagree with your interpretation.
Calling humans apes is just as ridiculous calling apes humans.
No. "Ape" is a vernacular term for the scientific term Hominoidea. The vernacular term is paraphyletic--it excludes, for no biologically valid reason, humans from the rest of the apes. I'm a strict phylogenist--the species decending from a common ancestor, and ALL such species, form clades. Thus, "ape" is the vernacular for the clade Hominoidea, which means all humans are apes but not all apes are humans. This is no different than saying "All F-150s are pickup trucks, but not all pickup trucks are F-150s".
When scientists lie it is a mistake. When the public exposed the mistake made by scientists they are accused of lying.
No. When scientists lie it's fraud and their careers are ruined. We've explained that repeatedly to you. You have yet to point out any real mistakes made by scientists; when I accuse you of lying, it's because you have deliberately stated false information. There is no double standard; there is only the fact that you refuse to confine yourself to rational discourse.
ApolloGnomon said:
Any positive contact between populations was an anomaly; the normal mode of populations competing for the same resources is competitive, with one side able to utilize the resource base better than the other.
While this may be true with modern humans, it's not true with other organisms. What normally happens is resource partitioning--each group focuses on what they do best, and avoids competition. Competition is very expensive; after all, you may lose. So it's reserved for when there are no other options. This resource partitioning may have consequences equally dramatic to those of competition--see killer whale diets through time for an example--but it is never the less a different process (though the difference is, admitedly, subtle, particularly since we're discussing predominant trends and, as ever in biology, exceptions prove the rule more than rules do).
What typically happens when humans move into a new area is that pre-existing predators shift their food sources. Humans eat the biggest stuff around, pretty much in every situation; so predators of that big stuff eat slightly smaller stuff. This can easily drive some predators to extinction--predators adapted to hunting megafauna simply aren't that good at hunting rabbits and lizards. A saber-tooth cat will lose to a fox every time when the competition is "Who can eat enough voles to survive?" That said, it's not competition with humans, strictly speaking, that causes the extinction--it's competition necessitated by avoidance of humans.
I'm not sure how Neanderthals would react. On the one hand, it makes sense to try to eat things humans don't (and for humans to eat things Neanderthals don't), since you're less likely to end up with a spear in the belly that way. On the other, we're talking the genus
Homo here, and there's every indication that we tend to dislike interlopers.