Afarensis is a 3.5-2.8 million year old hominin from the Kada Hadar member of the Hadar formation in the Middle Awash, Ethiopia. He is approximately 41 inches tall, weighs approximately 60 pounds and has a cranial capacity of a whopping 410 cc (approximately). Afarensis is currently considered to be transitional between apes and humans and displays some traits of both. Since he spends a lot of time on the couch watching monster movies, some observers question whether he is an obligate biped (although no one has observed him climbing a tree). He also has a blog called Transitions:The Evolution of Life His previous blog can be found here.
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"Loyalty to petrified opinion never broke a chain or freed a human soul..." Mark Twain
"Ideology is a poor substitute for rational thought..." Afarensis
"It isn't faith that makes good science...it's curiosity" Prof. Jacob Barnhardt, The Day the Earth Stood Still
"This man wishes to be accorded the same privilege as a sponge. He wishes to think!" Clarence Darrow, Inherit the Wind
"...I become fearful when I see people substituting fear for reason..." Klaatu, The Day the Earth Stood Still
"I want you to grab life by its little bunny ears and get in its face..." The Simpsons
"This is between me and the vegetable..." Seymour Krelborn, The Little Shop of Horrors
"There are bad laws and cruel laws and the people who enforce them are both bad and cruel..." Thea, Isle of the Dead
"With the first link, the chain is forged. The first speech censored, the first thought forbidden, the first freedom denied, chains us all irrevocably." Jean- Luc Picard, Star Trek: The Next Generation
"But the limit of tolerance for these human foibles is obtained when the proponent of a questionable scientific doctrine endeavors to maintain it against all possible odds by misrepresentation, misinformation and suppression of contradictory data, and by insinuating unfairness in opponents of his views." Franz Weidenreich, Morphology of Solo Man
"Man stands alone in the universe, a unique product of a long, unconcious, impersonal material process with unique understanding and potentialities. These he owes to no one but himself, and it is to himself that he is responsible. He is not the creature of uncontrollable and undeterminable forces, but his own master. He can and must decide and manage his own destiny." George Gaylord Simpson, Life of the Past
Yeah he's the Dick to the Dawk to the phd,
he's smarter than you he's got a science degree!
Yeah he's the Dick to the Dawk to the phd,
he's smarter than you he's got a science degree! Unknown
Whoever fights monsters should see to it that in the process he does not become a monster. And when you look into the abyss, the abyss also looks into you. Frederich Nietzsche
Science Daily reports on an interesting new application of Radiocarbon dating: From the end of World War II and up until about 1960, the superpowers of the Cold War era, conducted nuclear tests, detonating bombs into the atmosphere. These detonations...
I don't know how I missed this, but National Geographic has an interesting article concerning archaeological excavations at Mt. Lykaion - one of the birthplaces of Zeus (the other being Mt. Ida in Crete, but we know what Epimenides thought...
According to Yahoo News recent research near Mt. Taygete indicates that the Spartans did not, in point of fact, throw sickly or deformed children off a cliff:...
Archaeologists working at Midea - in the Argolid have discovered an underground passage thought to be an emergency source of water for the Mycenaean citadel. The passage dates to around the mid 13th century B.C. From MSNBC:...
Although most of the anthropology part of the blogosphere is buzzing over the paper on the gorilla, there was a second piece, in Nature, that I found interesting. In Fleece myth hints at golden age for Georgia Emiliano Feresin discusses...
Bullsnit. I say that as someone who is quite fond of ancient Greek sculpture and has more than a few books on the subject. Unless you consider the picture below to be a good representation of Noah:...
In his introduction to The First Fossil Hunters: Paleontology in Greek and Roman Times., paleontologist Peter Dodson writes: As a child I greatly enjoyed Greek mythology (always in preference to its more derivative Roman counterpart). I might also mention that...
I ask because I tuned into the last half of Histories Mysteries on the History channel a little while ago. It was just in time to her some lady talking about how she had surveyed all the ancient Greek literature...
From Science Daily: The team believes the machine might have been used to predict the motion of the planets, although the mechanism involving more than 30 wheels and dials represents a technical prowess not to be replicated for thousands...
A story on MSNBC talks about new attempts to carbon date the volcanic eruption on Santorini could revise the chronology of early Mediterranean history: Overall, the radiocarbon results indicate that the formation and high point of the New Palace period...
Added Later: My good blog buddy Duane over at Abnormal Interests has a post on this as well. I should mention that a Syrio-Palestinian archaeologist could not get away with it - nor should Lolosn (I don't know how classical...