|
Register | Sign In |
|
QuickSearch
Thread ▼ Details |
|
Thread Info
|
|
|
Author | Topic: "If I descended from an ape, how come apes are still here?" | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tangle Member Posts: 9510 From: UK Joined: Member Rating: 4.8 |
My thoughts too. But I'll use both.
Life, don't talk to me about life - Marvin the Paranoid Android
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tangle Member Posts: 9510 From: UK Joined: Member Rating: 4.8 |
you did not descend from an ape ,man was created by gods, apes were made different,but they learned just enough to stay alive, that's why they are still here Did you read the last version of the explanation at Message 95? Edited by Tangle, : Learning message linking......Life, don't talk to me about life - Marvin the Paranoid Android
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tangle Member Posts: 9510 From: UK Joined: Member Rating: 4.8 |
Big Al35 writes: Huh! Chimps are just as likely to have evolved from a human like ancestor as humans are to have evolved from a chimp like ancestor. Therefore, the human chain would gradually become shorter ending with a chimpanzee and the chimp chain would gradually become taller ending with a human. Ok if you still think that after reading the article, I've not explained something properly. Both lines of humans and chimps go backwards in time until they meet at a common ape ancestor. So they both evolved from the same ancestor then went their own ways. Is that not clear?Life, don't talk to me about life - Marvin the Paranoid Android
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tangle Member Posts: 9510 From: UK Joined: Member Rating: 4.8
|
Latest version, for those still interested.
If we descended from apes, how come apes are still here? What’s wrong with this picture?
Well nothing or pretty much everything — depending on what you think it shows. If you see it as man evolving over millions of years from ape-like ancestors, you’re right. But if you see it as a picture of how modern monkeys change into people, that’s probably why you may ask the question: If we descended from apes, how come apes are still here? To ask that question means that there’s a vital piece of information missing from the questioner’s understanding of what evolution is. That vital piece of information is the concept of the tree of life, that all things are related to each other. An evolution scientist on hearing that question might ask you a question back. Such as: "if I'm descended from my grandfather, how come he still exists?" or If dogs are descended from wolves, how come there are still wolves? Here’s fuller explanation. Chimpanzees are apes and one of our closest animal relatives - their scientific name is Pan troglodytes. Now, imagine that you are standing face to face with a female chimpanzee - let’s call her Pan. With your left hand you are holding the hand of your mother and your mother is holding the right hand of her mother and so on for thousands of generations back into the past. By doing this, you know as an absolute certainty that you are descended directly on your mother’s side to everyone in the chain. Imagine that Pan is doing the same but with her right hand. You now have two imaginary lines of women and female chimps holding hands going backwards in time - like a railway track with women and chimps lining each side. You can now walk down the centre of the rails and look carefully at your mother's family line and the chimp's family line going back millions of years. So what would do you see? Walking back about 200,000 years on the human side you see a mother who’s husband was a chap science named Heidelberg Man (Homo heidelbergensis ) she’s distinctly human, using tools and standing upright, probably hairless and very tall — the males are up to 7 feet tall. This is the first different species that we’ve come across in our chain. But you wouldn’t be able to tell exactly when Homo sapiens (people) merged into Heidelberg because each mother would look almost identical to the next — you can’t see the join. The changes from mother to mother are so gradual that you only see a change by comparing mothers thousands or millions of years apart. We only now know that Heidelberg is different from us because we’ve found his fossilised remains and we can compare it to ourselves today. This is why there’s no such thing as a transitional fossil or a missing link; every fossil is a transitional fossil and every living species is in transition to the next — if we had a fossil for every mother in the lines, even the experts wouldn’t be able to say where a separate species had been formed. We can only guess with hindsight. If you find this hard to grasp or you think it’s impossible for one species to change slowly into another we can see it happening today. For example, we call species that change slowly over geographic areas rather than over time, ring species. Here in the UK the Herring Gull and the Lesser Black-backed Gull are distinct and non-interbreeding species. But if you physically follow the Herring Gull west towards North America it gradually blurs into something more like a Lesser Black-backed Gull. It carries on changing towards Siberia and when it finally returns to Western Europe the Herring Gull has become a Lesser Black-backed Gull and the two species don’t interbreed. At no point in the ring can you say exactly where it changed species — it’s a gradual merging of characteristics over distance. As you walk back further, at about 500,000 years ago, you’d see a branch form and go off sideways from our human line, these are the Neanderthals (Homo neanderthalensis). They lived along side us but developed separately. There may even be Neanderthal mothers in our line, because we think that for some time there was interbreeding. And so on down the line of mothers through increasingly apelike creatures until at about 2.5 million years ago we reach an animal called the Southern African ape (Australopithecus africanis). This creature is small — around 4 feet, with a brain a third the size of ours and although she stands upright like us, she’s covered in hair and is distinctly apelike. We used to think that this is roughly where chimps split from the human line but modern molecular genetics tells us that it was earlier. We have to walk much farther down the lines to get to where most evolution scientists think chimps branch off - somewhere about 7m years ago. This mother would have looked something like a chap called ‘Taumai’ (Sahelanthropus tchadensis). He has the same brain size as a modern chimp but his face is a little more like a human than a chimp. No one knows for sure whether Taumai is the point where chimps start off on their own line but we do know one thing for certain: Wherever the split actually happened, at this point in the two lines of human and chimp descendants you would see that the right hand of a mother from the chimp line is now holding the left hand of a mother from the human line.The lines have met — the ancient chimp and the ancient human have the same mother. This mother starts the lines to both Pan and you, so Pan is your distant cousin. And both you, the human, and Pan, the ape are still here. So the apes developed along one line and we humans along another. We were in competition with each other whilst in the forest but the reason that there wasnt only one final surviving winner is because our ancestors moved from the trees onto the open savannah grasslands whilst the apes stayed in the forest. Once in the open we HAD to adapt to survive in the new environment; walking upright in order to run quickly and for long durations, losing hair to keep cool, developing tool use in order to hunt. The apes in the forest were already adapted to their environment so they developed along their own arboreal paths.
Life, don't talk to me about life - Marvin the Paranoid Android
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tangle Member Posts: 9510 From: UK Joined: Member Rating: 4.8
|
RAZD writes: 1. That picture is waaaay outdated, almost embarrassingly so, and does not really depict the current known stages of evolution of (a) hominins and (b) hominids, and (c) humans, and (d) (worst of all) it is an artistic impression. The common ancestor with chimps now appears to be an arboreal ape that did not knuckle walk (it appears that there is a difference between gorilla and chimp knuckle-walking sufficient that they may be independently evolved (derived) rather than inherited). Yes, I totally agree, but the whole point of the story is to show that the picture that the reader has in his head (of man descending from a chimp) is wrong. I'm trying to debunk that image, not show it as true. The rest of your post will take me some time to consider. I'm not trying to produce something that contains everything we know plus alternative scenarios, I'm trying to tell a simple story that is as supported by the facts as possible for people who are befuddled by the whole thing. But it does need to be as accurate as it can be, so I'll go through your points and see what I can use.Life, don't talk to me about life - Marvin the Paranoid Android
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tangle Member Posts: 9510 From: UK Joined: Member Rating: 4.8
|
Big Al writes: Here is one for you. As you can see homo erectus looks nothing like your image.
Do you really think that going to an online shop that sells replicas of fossils, then copy and pasting an image of a random skull you find there is any substitute at all for actual knowledge? There are real scientists that spend their entire lives working on these things; there's an enormous body of scientific study supporting what is said about human evolution and you think that you can google a single image and form a reasoned opinion that they're all wrong? I can see you nodding and grinning right now.Life, don't talk to me about life - Marvin the Paranoid Android
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tangle Member Posts: 9510 From: UK Joined: Member Rating: 4.8
|
Big Al writes: After having done my own research Care to share? (It's what we do here.) Or have you just looked at another picture in the bone shop?Life, don't talk to me about life - Marvin the Paranoid Android
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tangle Member Posts: 9510 From: UK Joined: Member Rating: 4.8
|
Big Al writes: Yes, I am ignoring you deliberately. I suspect that not looking under the bed won't help you with your worry that there might be something under there. Life, don't talk to me about life - Marvin the Paranoid Android
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tangle Member Posts: 9510 From: UK Joined: Member Rating: 4.8 |
Hi Poo and welcome.
I don't know whether you've read the entire thread or not, so I've just edited my first post to include my most recent version of the chimp & human handholding story so new people can find it more easily. Just click here: Message 1Life, don't talk to me about life - Marvin the Paranoid Android
|
|
|
Do Nothing Button
Copyright 2001-2023 by EvC Forum, All Rights Reserved
Version 4.2
Innovative software from Qwixotic © 2024