noname2200 said:
Homo sapiens is supposed to be about 200,000 years old. They probably only left East Africa 130,000 to 60,000 years ago. More to the point (and much more distressingly for our future), our numbers have only exploded in the past hundred years or so, when we developed sufficiently advanced agriculture to produce an abundance of food, the science we need to store the food, infrastructure and machines to move the food where it needs to be, and the medicines to let us not die at the rate we should. Let's not forget such essentials as artificial fertilizers, automobiles, and germ theory are all younger than many (most?) modern nations. There were less than a billion of us when Napoleon kicked the bucket, for example. The point is, there weren't as many of us as you'd think until recently. Additionally, we have plenty of samples of homo sapiens: it's earlier branches, like homo erectus, that we're largely blank on. That's not surprising, since these primitive hunter gatherers apparently didn't exactly survive long or even often. They certainly numbered far, far fewer than the dinosaurs. |
Exactly my point. Us in our current state are very different, less aligned with the cycle of things in nature opposed to the former. Unlike the rest of the animal kingdom we manipulate the earths natural resources. Once we became homosapien-sapien our numbers gradually shot into the millions and over the past five to six thousand years we've gained enormous ground over the earth. We don't even need major cataclysm like meteorites to befall us like the dinosaurs. We have human cataclysms like world wars. Our growth, control or dominance depends purely upon an artificial cycle opposed to the natural state of things. Humans go against one another, we feed a market. The rest of the world is our play thing (or at least they entertain or feed us on a steady chain). I really do need to check out the San Diego Zoo this year.
Back to the point...

Scientists have always been obsessed with the missing link in our evolution. Its the reason why people entertain theories like these. We seek to find a common ancestor in our evolution which could have buried their dead and made tools like us.







