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Posted on 6/10/24 at 10:40 pm to L.A.
I’ve been known to have bred with Neanderthals after a few Tanquerays and tonics…
Posted on 6/10/24 at 10:54 pm to gizmothepug
quote:
I’m taking more than 500,000 years when it comes to humans walking around on Earth. This planet is billions of years old and because of that I don’t buy for a second that humans/Neanderthals have only been around half a million years.
The British physicist Brian Cox has some interesting videos on youtube where he speculates on the relatively recent rise of complex life on earth. I don't remember his exact numbers but he's comfortable with the timeline that human life arose within the past 300,000 to 400,000 years. FWIW
Posted on 6/10/24 at 10:56 pm to 4x4tiger
quote:
I don't believe any of that shite. Period.
what specifically?
Posted on 6/10/24 at 11:00 pm to gizmothepug
quote:
I’m taking more than 500,000 years when it comes to humans walking around on Earth. This planet is billions of years old and because of that I don’t buy for a second that humans/Neanderthals have only been around half a million years.
BETA Page
guess it depends on your interpretation of human,
according to the fossil records
quote:
The earliest fossils considered to be remains of hominins (members of the human lineage) date to at least 4 mya in Africa; they include the genus Australopithecus and other forms. The next major evolutionary stage, Homo habilis, inhabited sub-Saharan Africa about 2–1.5 mya.
Uncover fossil evidence on human evolution

This post was edited on 6/10/24 at 11:06 pm
Posted on 6/10/24 at 11:02 pm to L.A.
quote:
Bro did you bang that Neanderthal?! Haha!
quote:
She wasn’t a Neanderthal dude. She’s just thicc
quote:
Bro she was definitely a Neanderthal
Posted on 6/10/24 at 11:05 pm to Tigerlaff
quote:
Wait, step hominid, what are you doing???
Posted on 6/10/24 at 11:14 pm to L.A.
That expjains this Southern Italian gal I banged for a few months in '83.
Posted on 6/10/24 at 11:15 pm to 4x4tiger
quote:
I don't believe any of that shite. Period
What do you believe. Question mark
Posted on 6/10/24 at 11:32 pm to L.A.
quote:
The British physicist Brian Cox has some interesting videos on youtube where he speculates on the relatively recent rise of complex life on earth. I don't remember his exact numbers but he's comfortable with the timeline that human life arose within the past 300,000 to 400,000 years. FWIW
Without coming off as a flat earth individual, 6-7 billions of years is a long time. A lot could happen along the way and end up completely erased from time, like it never happened.
Posted on 6/11/24 at 12:01 am to L.A.
quote:
quote:
Did they just get tired of the strange after 7000 years?
The Neanderthals died out around 40,000 years ago. I think they would have kept on banging if not for that.
The Neanderthals didn't really "die out," it's just that Homo Sapien genes were more and more prevalent until everybody was genetically mostly Homo Sapien. But also there were a lot of events that would kill off large population groups except for one family that had a genetic variation that let them survive, so they would be the start of a new group.
I mean, the same thing that makes all European males the descendants of Charlemagne and everybody alive today the descendants of some Kings or Queens or other... because at some point everybody else's descendants died out.
Posted on 6/11/24 at 12:14 am to hubertcumberdale
Pretty sure this guy lives in South Louisiana.


This post was edited on 6/11/24 at 12:17 am
Posted on 6/11/24 at 12:17 am to gizmothepug
quote:No doubt. In his videos Cox starts around 3.8 billion years ago with the rise of simple organisms. Before that, who knows?
Without coming off as a flat earth individual, 6-7 billions of years is a long time. A lot could happen along the way and end up completely erased from time, like it never happened.
Posted on 6/11/24 at 12:43 am to Lee B
quote:I'd say you're in the minority with that viewpoint. The scientific consensus is that the Neanderthals died out around 40,000 years ago. Not in one giant moment, of course. But their line seems to end, at least according to fossil records, around that time.
The Neanderthals didn't really "die out,"
Posted on 6/11/24 at 1:45 am to DeBoersTheMan
quote:
This explains a lot
it really does, just not in the way the general populous will receive it. turns out the populations with the highest percentage of neanderthal DNA have raised the third world out of the stone age and essentially ended world hunger
whodathunkit
Posted on 6/11/24 at 4:42 am to L.A.
Well, rumor is men will stick it in just about anything. J/S.

Posted on 6/11/24 at 4:49 am to L.A.
I’m not sure I buy this either. The question is, if this did happen, could they actually breed, and if they could breed would the offspring be sterile?
This is a bit above my pay grade, but the following short article discusses what is the possibility of humans and chimpanzees interbreeding. Isn’t the OP article discussing the same thing?
LINK
This is a bit above my pay grade, but the following short article discusses what is the possibility of humans and chimpanzees interbreeding. Isn’t the OP article discussing the same thing?
LINK
Posted on 6/11/24 at 4:57 am to UncleRuckus
quote:
What do you believe
Well I don't believe in neanderthals. Sure, there's some ugly mofo's out there but they're not neanderthals
Posted on 6/11/24 at 5:03 am to L.A.
I knew a guy at NASA who could have been a model for those neanderthal sculptures. Brilliant guy.
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