Doug Posted July 8, 2021 Share Posted July 8, 2021 Are you saying you worked with someone that looked like this or that you match that description? This was in Dallas/Salem Oregon. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MontanaFooter Posted July 9, 2021 Share Posted July 9, 2021 Neanderthal are popular always have been. Hard to say if humans off today resemble something prehistoric. ourideas about times past keeps getting updates about what they looked like what they ate and if we are all from the same happy family. . I didnt believe in hobbits until they found some skeletons so we all have more to learn . .. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
norseman Posted July 9, 2021 Admin Author Share Posted July 9, 2021 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Doug Posted July 9, 2021 Share Posted July 9, 2021 If he had Patty's body hair, I think we would have a match. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
guyzonthropus Posted July 12, 2021 Share Posted July 12, 2021 Dude's a beast! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Incorrigible1 Posted July 31, 2021 Share Posted July 31, 2021 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Incorrigible1 Posted August 14, 2021 Share Posted August 14, 2021 An interesting addition to the attempt to unravel the human species. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rockape Posted September 24, 2021 Share Posted September 24, 2021 Stunning footprints push back human arrival in Americas by thousands of years 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wiiawiwb Posted September 24, 2021 Share Posted September 24, 2021 Rockape...I can't read the entire article as I never agree to a website using my info to sell. How are those prints so pristine? They look like they were cast in concrete. It's stunning how narrow the instep and heel is compared to sasquatch prints we see today. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Huntster Posted September 24, 2021 Share Posted September 24, 2021 ^^^^^ Another example of science choosing which evidence to credit and which to simply discard. Huge footprints made last night with clear evidence of foot morphology is ignored, but footprints claimed to be over 23,000 years old (even though that's eons earlier than any other evidence of human habitation) is enough to get excited about and start stretching the envelope. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rockape Posted September 25, 2021 Share Posted September 25, 2021 (edited) 1 hour ago, wiiawiwb said: How are those prints so pristine? They look like they were cast in concrete. Quote According to a paper published today in the journal Science, the footprints were pressed into the mud near an ancient lake at White Sands between 21,000 and 23,000 years ago, a time when many scientists think that massive ice sheets walled off human passage into North America. Quote Footprints preserved in the boundless expanses of White Sands have drawn the attention of scientists since the early 1930s, when a government trapper spotted a print measuring a stunning 22 inches long and eight inches wide. He was convinced he'd found evidence for the mythical Bigfoot. "In a sense, he was right," says David Bustos, the park’s resource program manager and an author of the new study. "It was a big foot—but it was a big foot of a giant ground sloth and not a human.”. Quote Since then, careful study has uncovered thousands of tracks in the national park, providing snapshots of ancient humans and now-extinct animals like giant sloths and mammoths that wandered across the lands near ancient Lake Otero, a 1,600-square-mile body of water that dried up some 10,000 years ago. Each imprint was cast and bound millennia ago in gypsum-rich sand whose pale color gives the park its name. Some are eventually exposed by winds whipping across the dunes but quickly weather away in the elements. Other prints, hidden beneath the sand, are visible only to the trained eye as faint shifts in color at the surface at rare times when the ground is not too wet or dry. Edited September 25, 2021 by Rockape Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Incorrigible1 Posted February 4, 2022 Share Posted February 4, 2022 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Hoekler73 Posted February 4, 2022 Share Posted February 4, 2022 Neanderthals have contributed approximately 1-4% of the genomes of non-African modern humans, although a modern human who lived about 40,000 years ago has been found to have between 6-9% Neanderthal DNA (Fu et al 2015). https://humanorigins.si.edu/evidence/genetics/ancient-dna-and-neanderthals/interbreeding Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Catmandoo Posted February 10, 2022 Share Posted February 10, 2022 New paper released on modern humans and Neanderthals living in same area. Pushes back modern human presence about 54,000 years in France. Modern humans did not do well in this area. The research area is huge. It has been studied for 30 years. Every time I turn around ancient DNA shows up in a little bone, tools are found and human occupation keeps getting pushed back on the time scale. https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.abj9496 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bipedalist Posted February 10, 2022 BFF Patron Share Posted February 10, 2022 (edited) / yet we still have not found attributable Sasquatch dna to date? They must be boneless! And, have owned neuralyzers that erased their dna. "....By combining the study of dental metric and nonmetric features with shape analyses of the crown outline (for the most worn specimens) and the enamel-dentine junction (EDJ; for the specimens only moderately affected by occlusal wear), assessment of enamel thickness, and root proportions (note S6 and tables S13 to S19), it is possible to distinguish Neanderthals and modern humans (10, 11).... " Simply amazing from part of a tooth. "... Together, these data suggest that the Mediterranean basin, from the Levantine coast to the Rhodanian corridor, appears to have played a major role during the geographic expansion of modern humans in Western Eurasia...." Edited February 10, 2022 by bipedalist Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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