RE: Homo Erectus, Guys, Not HSS
May 4, 2018 at 4:16 pm
(This post was last modified: May 4, 2018 at 4:21 pm by Anomalocaris.)
(May 4, 2018 at 2:50 pm)Minimalist Wrote: And they had to have boats to get there!
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/world/sc...-1.3971622
Quote:Evidence of tools surrounding the carcass of a 700,000-year-old rhino suggests ancient man lived in the Philippines much earlier than once believed.
The animal's butchered corpse was found on the northern island of Luzon — the Philippines' largest — nearly 650,000 years prior to the timeframe scientists once established for humans in the country. But these people weren't the homosapiens we know today. It's believed that they were hominids or "hobbits."
Experts thought that early man wouldn't have been able to reach the island nation at that time because they didn't have boats to cross the water. Instead, a "freak" event likely lent a hand.
"They may have been caught in a tsunami and carried out to sea.
A tsunami? Are you fucking kidding me? Tsunamis kill people. They do not serve as a magic carpet transit system!
Well, in 1888, when Krakatoa volcano erupted, it created rafts of floating pumice in the Sunda sea. Then the volcano subsided into its caldera and caused a series of 4 of the worst tsunamis in recorded history. Guess what happened? Some of the pumice rafts were washed on land by an earlier tsunami, then some animals got onto the raft, and the rafts were washed back out to sea again by a later tsunami. Some of these rafts were recorded to have carried live animals all the way across the Indian Ocean to Africa.
There were also records of people being clinging to palm trunks being washed out to sea by the tsunami and drifted onto another island during the same event. There is even record of a person being washed out to sea clinging to a dead alligator and washing up alive on a nearby island during that tsunami.
So tsunami borne transaocean migration isn’t as far fetched as it looks.
Also, it doesm’t Require tsunami for creature to accidentally cross an ocean. Monkeys evolved in the old world long after South America and Africa split for good in the opening of south Atlantic. Yet some old world monkeys evidently drifted all the way across the Atlantic to South America to become ancesters of new world monkeys on mats of vegetation.