J
Jet Black
Guest
no, both evolved, just one evolved to a radically different environment. just because a group stays morphologically similar does not mean they did not evolve.dr.p said:So you're saying the common ancestor would have looked more like a chimp, and that some chimps evolved; some didn't.
there are too many errors in the AAH to go into, so I am not going to. you base your entire argument against evolution on a bad hypothesis. naughty you.I see NO reason for the change in some and not in others. Environment is ruled out as a factor if you say what the above article says (they changed while still in the forest with the other monkeys). Nourishment, etc., would have been the same. So what caused the divergence?
Your view is oversimplistic. why the black and white "straight from dense forest to open savannah" as the forests were receding, doubtless there would be clumps of forest. Even a slight ability to run a bit better would be beneficial when the organisms were running back to the forest. Remember that when evolving methods of predator escape, the task is not to outrun the predator, but not be the slowest of those trying to escape. Furthermore, why are you living by the assumption that bipedality was purely for escaping predators? It is well worth noticing there that humans have the longest running stamina of any animal. i doubt a chimp could out run a lion, or similar large predator, so a desert dwelling (or somewhere in the plains) would be doubtful, since they would have few (if any) trees to hide in, depending... and their size alone is enough to get them eaten out there.
Yes, I see them drowning, boiling, freezing, or being digested... sorry I'm so skepticalcan't help it.
your views are oversimplistic. sceptical you may be, but it is due to a strawman of your own creation.
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