David M
Well-Known Member
How many times do you have to be told that Homonini is the FAMILY tribe ABOVE the genus HOMO. Homonini INCLUDES chimps and bonobos and the HOMO line starts with the HOMO genus. CHIMPS HAVE NOT BEEN PUT IN THE HOMO LINE...YET.... This is BIO101 stuff and I am sick of your stupidity. Do you speak English?
Yes I know that tribe is above Genus, you are the one who has to be repeatedly told what this actually means. It means that all members of the Genus Homo are members of the Tribe Hominini, living or extinct.
From Wiki.
But finally you have admitted that all species of the Genus Homo (and all species of the Genus Pan) are of the Tribe Hominini. So perhaps you can apply your Bio101 and explain how a disagreement as to whether "hobbits" were encaphalic Homo sapiens or our close relatives Homo floresiensis could lead to them not being of the Tribe Hominini.Hominini is the tribe of Homininae that comprises Humans (Homo), and two species of the genus Pan (the Common Chimpanzee and the Bonobo), their ancestors, and the extinct lineages of their common ancestor.
That was one of your (stupider) claims:
Paintedwolf...I have pasted research that speaks to florensiensis being queried as belonging to homonini.
If both sides of the debate you pasted place "hobbits" in the same Genus how can this query that they are not in the same Tribe. Someone could propose that "hobbits" were close relatives of bonobos and should be called Pan floresiensis and that still would not be querying whether they belong to the hominini.
And if both sides of the disputes you pasted both say that "hobbits" belong in the Genus Homo how can they be querying that they belong to the tribe Hominini.
And from September 2010.…this.. Have you got anything more recent?
'Hobbit' Was an Iodine-Deficient Human, Not Another Species, New Study Suggests
ScienceDaily (Sep. 28, 2010) — A new paper is set to re-ignite debate over the origins of so-called Homo floresiensis -- the 'hobbit' that some scientists have claimed as a new species of human
Their work confirms the close grouping of H. floresiensis with the hypothyroid cretins, and the clear separation from both modern humans and from chimpanzees. This leads them to conclude that the Liang Bua remains were indeed most likely cretins from a population of unaffected H. sapiens. They have, further, provided a series of predictions for the further testing of the cretin hypothesis.
"This is consistent with recent hypothyroid endemic cretinism throughout Indonesia, including the nearby island of Bali," Professor Oxnard said.
Do you ever read things before you paste them?
This claim says still places "hobbits" in the Genus Homo. It argues that there were Homo sapiens and not Homo floresiensis. Its the SAME GENUS, so its the same tribe.
Once again you have failed to provide any evidence of a dispute that "hobbits" were not members of the Tribe Hominini.
And here's my original point:
No reputable scientist with any qualification in palaentology disputed that Florensisensis was a human (and thus a primate), what they disputed was exactly where it should fit among the recent members of the genus Homo. The only people claiming it was a non-human primate were the liars for jesus crowd.
Thanks for confirming yet again that the discussion is not whether "hobbits" were human but where they should be placed within the Genus Homo.
The point being that deciding if a fossil is a chimp or belongs in the human line at all, does not appear to be as clear cut as one would expect.
Wrong, because every single one of your pastes has explicitly shown that "hobbits" are considered to be human (i.e. members of the Genus Homo). Its clear cut to people who pay attention to reality.
As a result I have concluded that scientists can make what they wish of fossils. These so called Homo mid species could just as likely be variations of chimp and other non human primates, Researchers have no idea what ancestral chimps or any other primitive non human primate looked like, nor how the environment/adaptation, let alone genetic drift, has impacted on their morphology. Smooth transitions just did not happen, hence staged evolution.
You conclusion is wrong.
After looking to Wiki “Gene”, I am even less convinced by these percentage similarities the researchers speak to as I do not think they have any clue what genes to count nor how to count similarity. Hence a chimp currently is anywhere from 95-99% similar to humans, depending on whose work you wish to quote. Researchers can and will report the data in such a way that backs their current claim to fame.
So you know even less about genetics than you do cladistics.
The 95%-99% is not dependent on whose work you wish to quote, its dependent on which method you used to count the differences in the genomes because there is more than 1 valid way of counting the differences between genomes.
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