PDA

View Full Version : Out-of-Africa-Hypothese debunked!



Teja
05-23-2017, 06:24 AM
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0177127

Archaeologists found a mandible and a molar in the Balkans, which belong to a Hominini species older than the oldest from Africa. They called it Graecopithecus freybergi and it is 7,24 million years old.

German news article:
https://www.welt.de/wissenschaft/article164823057/Lebten-die-Vorfahren-des-Menschen-doch-in-Europa.html

HERK
05-23-2017, 06:58 AM
I knew it, you are all ALbanians.

wvwvw
05-23-2017, 07:00 AM
There's also the Archanthropus of Petralona. Today, most academics who have analyzed the Petralona remains say that the cranium of the Archanthropus of Petralona belongs to an archaic hominid distinguished from Homo erectus, and from both the classic Neanderthals and anatomically modern humans, but showing characterists of all those species and presenting strong European traits. A skull dating back 700,000 which is either Homo sapien or part Homo sapien is in direct conflict with the Out of Africa theory of human evolution.

wvwvw
05-23-2017, 07:02 AM
I knew it, you are all ALbanians.

You're an Albopithecus

HERK
05-23-2017, 07:44 AM
You're an Albopithecus

Sciptaricus

LoLeL
05-23-2017, 01:03 PM
https://www.newscientist.com/article/2132026-our-common-ancestor-with-chimps-may-be-from-europe-not-africa/

https://d1o50x50snmhul.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/22180011/lead-800x533.jpg


The last common ancestor we shared with chimps seems to have lived in the eastern Mediterranean – not in East Africa as generally assumed.

This bold conclusion comes from a study of Greek and Bulgarian fossils, suggesting that the most mysterious of all ancient European apes was actually a human ancestor, or hominin. However, other researchers remain unconvinced by the claim.

Go back 12 or more million years ago and Europe was an ape’s paradise. But, about 10 million years ago, environmental conditions deteriorated and the European apes began to disappear. Apes became largely confined to Africa, splitting there into gorillas, chimpanzees and humans.

At least, that’s what most researchers think happened. But in 2012, Nikolai Spassov at the National Museum of Natural History in Sofia, Bulgaria, and his colleagues reported the discovery of an ape tooth from Bulgaria that was just 7 million years old. It was, they said, the youngest European ape fossil yet found.

LoLeL
05-23-2017, 01:43 PM
European fossils may belong to earliest known hominid (https://www.sciencenews.org/article/european-fossils-may-belong-earliest-known-hominid)

Norse
05-24-2017, 08:00 PM
The most groundbreaking discovery in years doesn't generate 10 replies.

Meanwhile you can get 100 by just saying "Albanians and Greeks are".

Teja
06-08-2017, 11:24 PM
Now this:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-4574046/Homo-sapiens-evolved-100-000-years-EARLIER-thought.html

The oldest Homo Sapiens dates back 300.000 years and is thus older than the ones discovered in Ethiopia or South Africa. The impacts are getting further north. Next one will be even older and from Eurasia.