Extinct species of archaic human from 2 mya to 300 kya
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How did we go from ancient apes to the dominant species on Earth? The story of human evolution is one of survival, adaptation, and extinction - stretching back 7 million years.In this episode of The Ancients, Tristan Hughes is joined by Dr. Henry Gee to unravel the complex origins of humanity. From the first bipedal hominins to the evolutionary leaps that set Homo sapiens apart, together they explore why humans evolved from long-armed tree dwellers to upright walkers and discuss the the advantages that bipedalism gave our ancestors over other species.More from Henry Gee:The Origins of Life on Earth: https://open.spotify.com/episode/3Rb4OcjbmsjIHpFemJ7mmOFeathered Dinosaurs: https://open.spotify.com/episode/05wbG2dMp174D10gP30kIjMore on this topic:Homo Erectus: https://open.spotify.com/episode/3MjgWtiENDpVXc5qv77oTyHuman Evolution: Dragon Man: https://open.spotify.com/episode/128XsUffcThVirTghas7OAPresented by Tristan Hughes. Audio editor is Aidan Lonergan, the producer is Joseph Knight. The senior producer is Anne-Marie Luff.All music courtesy of Epidemic SoundsThe Ancients is a History Hit podcast.Sign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week and ad-free podcasts. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe. You can take part in our listener survey here: https://insights.historyhit.com/history-hit-podcast-always-on
En este capítulo, hablamos de Pink, un fósil de más de 1,4 millones de años hallado en la sierra de Atapuerca, que representa el rostro humano más antiguo encontrado en Europa. El descubrimiento adelanta en más de medio millón de años la presencia de homínidos en el continente y sugiere que Homo Erectus, o una forma muy próxima, fue quien abrió camino por estos territorios. Nos lo cuenta uno de los autores del estudio, el arqueólogo extremeño Antonio Rodríguez Hidalgo, investigador en el Instituto de Arqueología de Mérida.
(01:00) In Spanje is een stukje van het gezicht gevonden van de oudste mens die ooit in Europa heeft rondgelopen. Die vondst geeft nieuwe inzichten in de diversiteit en de evolutie van de menselijke soort in dit deel van de wereld. Gerrit Dusseldorp is expert op het gebied van het gedrag van jager-verzamelaars uit het Pleistoceen en vertelt meer. (07:21) Wim Berkelaar bespreekt drie historische boeken: In alles tot het uiterste - Frits de Lange Machtswoorden - Remieg Aerts, Coen Brummer en Gertjan Schutte Oekraïne onder vuur - Eugene Finkel (vert. Koen Boelens) (20:52) In de jaren 40 en 50 wordt de Limburgse Lies overspoeld door honderden liefdesbrieven. Wie was deze mysterieuze vrouw die zoveel verlangen opwekte? En hoeveel vrijheid had zij in die tijd eigenlijk om te kiezen? De zesdelige podcast Liefste Lies vertelt haar verhaal en schetst tegelijkertijd een hedendaags portret van liefde, vrijheid en het verlangen om iets te zijn in het leven. Deze serie werd gemaakt door Heleen Hummelen en Wieky de Boer. De serie is een coproductie van Autres Directions, Aldus' producties en OVT en is mogelijk gemaakt door financiële steun van het NPO-fonds en het Fonds Bijzondere Journalistieke Projecten. Meer info: https://www.vpro.nl/programmas/ovt/luister/afleveringen/2025/16-03-2025.html# (https://www.vpro.nl/programmas/ovt/luister/afleveringen/2025/16-03-2025.html)
In Spanje is een stukje van het gezicht gevonden van de oudste mens die ooit in Europa heeft rondgelopen. Die vondst geeft nieuwe inzichten in de diversiteit en de evolutie van de menselijke soort in dit deel van de wereld. Gerrit Dusseldorp is expert op het gebied van het gedrag van jager-verzamelaars uit het Pleistoceen en hij komt vertellen wat het gevonden bot vertelt over die alleroudste bewoners van het Europese continent
Eudald Carbonell, arqueólogo y vicepresidente de la Fundación Atapuerca y director del Centro de Investigación Emiliano Aguirre (CIEA) de la Fundación, ha donado todo su archivo al Museo de Atapuerca. Se trata de alrededor de 140 cuadernos de bitácora de diversa índole: "He dejado todo mi patrimonio investigador, mis cuadernos de bitácora, mis apuntes, mis cartas... Todo lo que tenía lo he cedido al centro de investigación Emiliano Aguirre", cuenta en Las Mañanas de RNE con Josep Cuní. "Se podrá saber muchísimo de la prehistoria y de la evolución humana", añade. El arqueólogo admite que sus alumnos a lo largo de los años son la representación de sus múltiples miradas: "He generado conocimiento a más de mil o dos mil arqueólogos. Mi mirada es la bondad de la gente, la concepción científica de que ser una buena persona es ser un buen científico", apunta. Como sello final a su trayectoria de 46 años en Atapuerca, Carbonell anuncia que en 15 días se dará a conocer una "gran revelación científica": "Será una gran noticia y llevará a discusión la llegada del Homo erectus a Europa", revela. Escuchar audio
C'est une première réalisée par le paléontologue Antoine Balzeau : recréer en 3D le cerveau de Neandertal et de Cro-Magnon. Le projet Paléo-brain ou comment se mettre dans la tête de nos ancêtres pour mieux comprendre ce qui se passe dans la nôtre ? Mettons-nous dans la tête de nos ancêtres préhistoriques, pour mieux comprendre ce qui se passe dans la nôtre ! Sauf qu'il y a un sacré problème : le cerveau ne se fossilise pas. Comment à partir du crâne de Neandertal Cro-Magnon ou Homo Erectus, reconstituer le contenu c'est-à-dire le cerveau de nos ancêtres ? Un défi de taille, relevé par notre invité le paléontologue Antoine Balzeau.Avec Antoine Balzeau, chargé de recherche au CNRS et chercheur au Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle. Il consacre ses travaux à l'étude des transformations morphologiques des premiers hommes, en s'intéressant surtout à l'évolution du crâne et du cerveau. Son ouvrage Dans la tête de nos ancêtres vient de paraître aux Éditions Belin.Reportage de Raphaëlle Pluskwa sur la pièce Néandertal au Théâtre du Rond-Point. Musiques diffusées- Serge Reggiani - L'homme fossile- Thomas Fersen, Trio SR9 – Blasé [Playlist RFI].
C'est une première réalisée par le paléontologue Antoine Balzeau : recréer en 3D le cerveau de Neandertal et de Cro-Magnon. Le projet Paléo-brain ou comment se mettre dans la tête de nos ancêtres pour mieux comprendre ce qui se passe dans la nôtre ? Mettons-nous dans la tête de nos ancêtres préhistoriques, pour mieux comprendre ce qui se passe dans la nôtre ! Sauf qu'il y a un sacré problème : le cerveau ne se fossilise pas. Comment à partir du crâne de Neandertal Cro-Magnon ou Homo Erectus, reconstituer le contenu c'est-à-dire le cerveau de nos ancêtres ? Un défi de taille, relevé par notre invité le paléontologue Antoine Balzeau.Avec Antoine Balzeau, chargé de recherche au CNRS et chercheur au Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle. Il consacre ses travaux à l'étude des transformations morphologiques des premiers hommes, en s'intéressant surtout à l'évolution du crâne et du cerveau. Son ouvrage Dans la tête de nos ancêtres vient de paraître aux Éditions Belin.Reportage de Raphaëlle Pluskwa sur la pièce Néandertal au Théâtre du Rond-Point. Musiques diffusées- Serge Reggiani - L'homme fossile- Thomas Fersen, Trio SR9 – Blasé [Playlist RFI].
C'est il y a 400.000 ans environ que se produit un événement déterminant dans l'histoire de l'humanité : la maîtrise du feu. A partir de là, à partir de ce tournant décisif, l'homme va pouvoir éloigner les dangers, s'installer dans des régions auparavant inhospitalières, cuire ses aliments, améliorer la fabrication d'outils, prolonger le jour : augmenter l'espérance de vie. Comment Homo erectus et, plus tard, Homo sapiens et Neandertal ont-ils appris à allumer le feu et le conserver ? Comment expliquer que, sans se rencontrer, ils aient été en mesure au même moment, en divers endroits de la planète, de l'apprivoiser ? C'est la leçon du jour. Invité : Henry de Lumley, paléontologiste, directeur de l'Institut de paléontologie humaine-Fondation Albert IE Prince de Monaco. « La domestication du feu aux temps paléolithiques » aux éditions Odile Jacob Sujets traités : Homo erectus, Homo sapiens, Neandertal , domestication, feu, paléolithiques Merci pour votre écoute Un Jour dans l'Histoire, c'est également en direct tous les jours de la semaine de 13h15 à 14h30 sur www.rtbf.be/lapremiere Retrouvez tous les épisodes d'Un Jour dans l'Histoire sur notre plateforme Auvio.be :https://auvio.rtbf.be/emission/5936 Intéressés par l'histoire ? Vous pourriez également aimer nos autres podcasts : L'Histoire Continue: https://audmns.com/kSbpELwL'heure H : https://audmns.com/YagLLiKEt sa version à écouter en famille : La Mini Heure H https://audmns.com/YagLLiKAinsi que nos séries historiques :Chili, le Pays de mes Histoires : https://audmns.com/XHbnevhD-Day : https://audmns.com/JWRdPYIJoséphine Baker : https://audmns.com/wCfhoEwLa folle histoire de l'aviation : https://audmns.com/xAWjyWCLes Jeux Olympiques, l'étonnant miroir de notre Histoire : https://audmns.com/ZEIihzZMarguerite, la Voix d'une Résistante : https://audmns.com/zFDehnENapoléon, le crépuscule de l'Aigle : https://audmns.com/DcdnIUnUn Jour dans le Sport : https://audmns.com/xXlkHMHSous le sable des Pyramides : https://audmns.com/rXfVppvN'oubliez pas de vous y abonner pour ne rien manquer.Et si vous avez apprécié ce podcast, n'hésitez pas à nous donner des étoiles ou des commentaires, cela nous aide à le faire connaître plus largement.
We're picking up speed from here on, the fulcrum that was the mid-19th Century is passed and our story is developing quickly - this is episode 203 the Siege of Makapansgat and Reconstituting history. It is 1854, almost mid-way through the sixth decade of this momentous century and the region that's under our gaze is the northern Limpopo territory, the Waterberg. Those who live there today will know of its grandeur, and its extensive mountain ranges, riverine bush, delightful geology. Thaba Meetse is the northern Sotho name for the Waterberg, where the average height of the peaks here are 600 meters, rising to 2 000 meters above sea level. The vegetation is officially known as dry deciduous forest, or just the Bushveld to you and me. The original people here date back thousands of years, early evolutionary stages of hominid development can be traced here, so in some ways, it's part of the story of human existence on the planet. Its all about the type of rocks here, and the soils. Clamber amongst the red koppies and ravines and you can look out over the bush veld, with it's minerals such as vanadium and platinum, part of the Bushveld Igneous complex I spoke about in episodes one and two. Tectonic forces forced the rocks upwards, creating the famous Waterberg, the Thaba Meetse ranges, rivers deposited sediment and in these sandstone layers, you'll find the famous caves surrounded by cliffs hundreds of feet high, rising from the plains. Scientists and palaeontologists tracked our very first human ancestors who lived at Waterberg as early as three million years ago, and inside the cave we're going to hear about, Makapansgat, skeletons of Australopithecus Africanus have been found. Homo Erectus remains have also been found in the cave. This site has yielded many thousands of fossil bones, and what is known as The Cave of Hearths preserves a remarkably complete record of human occupation from Early Stone Age “Acheulian” times in the oldest sediments through the Middle Stone Age, the Later Stone Age and up to the Iron Age. It also is where one of the earliest Homo sapiens remains were found, a jaw found in the cave layers by archaeologists. The lime enriched deposits and dry conditions within the cave have allowed for the exceptional preservation of plant, animal and human remains as Amanda Beth Esterhuysen points out in her 2007 Wits University PhD. So its really metaphorical — an iconic cave because this is where the Boers and the Kekana people were going to go to war. Part of our story this episode is about a track, a wagon trail, that passed between the ivory hunting centre of Schoemansdal, Soutpansberg and the newly established Boer town of Pretoria and which cut straight through the middle of Kekana chief Mokopane's territory. And inside this territory is Makapansgat. Since the first trekkers had arrived in 1837, the Langa and Kekana people who lived in the Waterberg had watched in some disquiet as the numbers of Boers increased over the years. It was almost two decades after Louis Trichardt had wheeled his wagons through the Waterberg, and by the mid-19th Century there wasn't a week that went past without hunters or prospectors wandering through. It's a double irony then to relate that both the Langa and Kekana had origins further south, they were part of the amaNdebele who had fled from Northern Zululand during Shaka's reign, related to the amaHlubi, and had been involved in some land seizing themselves. Don't simplify history, its more radical than a buffet hall of red berets. King Mghombane Gheghana of the Kekana, and Mankopane of the Langa, were not prepared to accept Trekker overlordship like they had fought against Mzilikazi's overlordship. They rejected the trekker system of labour where every black adult male was supposed to work for the Boers for nothing. Mokopane by the way is a northern Sotho form of Mghombane Gheghana, and he was known throughout the territory as Mokopane.
We're picking up speed from here on, the fulcrum that was the mid-19th Century is passed and our story is developing quickly - this is episode 203 the Siege of Makapansgat and Reconstituting history. It is 1854, almost mid-way through the sixth decade of this momentous century and the region that's under our gaze is the northern Limpopo territory, the Waterberg. Those who live there today will know of its grandeur, and its extensive mountain ranges, riverine bush, delightful geology. Thaba Meetse is the northern Sotho name for the Waterberg, where the average height of the peaks here are 600 meters, rising to 2 000 meters above sea level. The vegetation is officially known as dry deciduous forest, or just the Bushveld to you and me. The original people here date back thousands of years, early evolutionary stages of hominid development can be traced here, so in some ways, it's part of the story of human existence on the planet. Its all about the type of rocks here, and the soils. Clamber amongst the red koppies and ravines and you can look out over the bush veld, with it's minerals such as vanadium and platinum, part of the Bushveld Igneous complex I spoke about in episodes one and two. Tectonic forces forced the rocks upwards, creating the famous Waterberg, the Thaba Meetse ranges, rivers deposited sediment and in these sandstone layers, you'll find the famous caves surrounded by cliffs hundreds of feet high, rising from the plains. Scientists and palaeontologists tracked our very first human ancestors who lived at Waterberg as early as three million years ago, and inside the cave we're going to hear about, Makapansgat, skeletons of Australopithecus Africanus have been found. Homo Erectus remains have also been found in the cave. This site has yielded many thousands of fossil bones, and what is known as The Cave of Hearths preserves a remarkably complete record of human occupation from Early Stone Age “Acheulian” times in the oldest sediments through the Middle Stone Age, the Later Stone Age and up to the Iron Age. It also is where one of the earliest Homo sapiens remains were found, a jaw found in the cave layers by archaeologists. The lime enriched deposits and dry conditions within the cave have allowed for the exceptional preservation of plant, animal and human remains as Amanda Beth Esterhuysen points out in her 2007 Wits University PhD. So its really metaphorical — an iconic cave because this is where the Boers and the Kekana people were going to go to war. Part of our story this episode is about a track, a wagon trail, that passed between the ivory hunting centre of Schoemansdal, Soutpansberg and the newly established Boer town of Pretoria and which cut straight through the middle of Kekana chief Mokopane's territory. And inside this territory is Makapansgat. Since the first trekkers had arrived in 1837, the Langa and Kekana people who lived in the Waterberg had watched in some disquiet as the numbers of Boers increased over the years. It was almost two decades after Louis Trichardt had wheeled his wagons through the Waterberg, and by the mid-19th Century there wasn't a week that went past without hunters or prospectors wandering through. It's a double irony then to relate that both the Langa and Kekana had origins further south, they were part of the amaNdebele who had fled from Northern Zululand during Shaka's reign, related to the amaHlubi, and had been involved in some land seizing themselves. Don't simplify history, its more radical than a buffet hall of red berets. King Mghombane Gheghana of the Kekana, and Mankopane of the Langa, were not prepared to accept Trekker overlordship like they had fought against Mzilikazi's overlordship. They rejected the trekker system of labour where every black adult male was supposed to work for the Boers for nothing. Mokopane by the way is a northern Sotho form of Mghombane Gheghana, and he was known throughout the territory as Mokopane.
Bisher wussten Forschende nur: Es haben gleichzeitig mehrere Frühmenschenarten gelebt. Aber ob sie sich je begegnet sind oder sogar zusammen in einer Gegend lebten – Das wusste niemand. Versteinerte Fußabdrücke bringen Neuigkeiten. Von Jana Magdanz.
Join us at DuBois SuperCon on November 16th at the DuBois Alliance Fellowship Hall! Free admission, meet Mitch and DeeJ, snag some merch and maybe hear yourself on a future episode! What's it like to bike naked through the UK? We don't know but we get a little bit of insight from this week's offbeat news story. The brain is a fickle bitch! This week we dive deep into some scientific mysteries that even our top minds can't solve. Like, who named the things that we just know by those names (like the earth, the brain, etc.)?? And what's up with dreams (and wet dreams)? Do you have the answers or another mind-bending question that science can't seem to find the answer to? Leave us a voicemail at 814-299-5155 or email us at ineffablysublimepod@gmail.com. And as always, join the conversation on our Facebook page @IneffablySublimePod.
Mon, 23 Sep 2024 02:00:00 +0000 https://geschichteeuropas.podigee.io/383-383 7bec64b7c67540b2199402dc49c0b9b7 C: Vorgeschichte und Altsteinzeit Verknüpfte Folgen Die Neandertaler, mit Dr. Elham Ghasidian (01.11.2020) Charles Darwin, The Descent of Man (1871/74) (22.09.2024) Den Podcast unterstützen UNTERSTÜTZE DEN PODCAST BEI STEADY! Marlon unterstützt den Podcast seit März 2023 mit einem Betrag, der den monatlichen Hosting-Kosten entspricht. Dafür möchte ich ihm hier ganz besonders danken! EINZELSPENDE ÜBER PAYPAL SENDEN Ab dem 10. September 2024 nenne ich regelmäßig in der Anmoderation die Vornamen von neuen, den Podcast unterstützenden Personen. Widerspruch dagegen bitte ich im Zusammenhang mit dem Zusenden der Unterstützung anzuzeigen. Feedback und Kommentare! Podcast-Blog mit Kommentarfunktion #historytelling - Netzwerk unabhängiger Geschichtspodcasts Schick mir Kommentare und Feedback als Email! Der Podcast bei Fyyd Folge mir bei Mastodon! Frag mich nach deiner persönlichen Einladung ins schwarze0-Discord! Die Episoden werden thematisch und nicht nach Erscheinungsdatum nummeriert. Für einen chronologischen Durchgang zur europäischen Geschichte sollten die Episoden nach Namen sortiert werden. schwarze0fm hatte als Hobbyprojekt begonnen - inzwischen habe ich aber durch Auftragsproduktionen und Crowdfunding die Möglichkeit gewonnen, mehr und bessere Folgen für Geschichte Europas zu produzieren. Das Prinzip "schwarze Null" bleibt - die Einnahmen werden verwendet, für mich Rahmenbedingungen zu schaffen, den Podcast zu betreiben und weiterzuentwickeln. In dieser Folge habe ich das ausführlich erklärt. This episode of "Geschichte Europas" by schwarze0fm (Tobias Jakobi) first published 2024-09-23. CC-BY 4.0: You are free to share and adapt this work even for commercial use as long as you attribute the original creator and indicate changes to the original. Der Podcast ist Teil des Netzwerks #historytelling und von Wissenschaftspodcasts.de. 383 full C: Vorgeschichte und Altsteinzeit no Europa,Steinzeit,Altsteinzeit,Vorgeschichte,Humanevolution,Homo erectus Tobias Jakobi
Ales er ooit verschillende mensensoorten rondliepen op onze planeet, waarom is er nu dan nog maar eentje over? En wat maakt de Homo Sapiens dan zo anders dan pakweg de Homo Neanderthalensis of de Homo Erectus. Antwoorden op deze vragen en meer in deze aflevering van Geschiedenis van.
Where do Neanderthals, Homo Erectus, and other skeletal remains fall into a timeline that fits a creation model? Were Neanderthals created in the image of God? What criteria makes someone human? Dr. Todd Wood explores these questions in a recent paper he co-authored with Dr. Marcus Ross, and joins to discuss them with Henry. "Human History from Adam to Abraham" - Scientific paper by Dr. Todd Wood & Dr. Marcus Ross Homo Naledi - Digging for Truth TV Let's Talk Creation Podcast - Dr. Wood with Paul Garner Praise to the Lord, The Almighty - performed by Taryn Harbridge
The sun's ramping up its activity and now we have a better idea of what's driving itThis spring we've seen some spectacular displays of northern lights and we're expecting to see more as we approach the peak of the sun's natural cycle, the solar maximum. Every 11 years the sun cycles from having few sunspots on its surface to having many. Now according to a new study in the journal Nature, scientists have figured out what may be driving this process. Geoff Vasil, an associate professor of computational and applied mathematics at the University of Edinburgh, said instabilities in swirling magnetic systems near the sun's surface gives rise to sunspots on its surface that can erupt and send solar storms our way.Female otters use tools more than males – to crack open tasty treats and save their teethOtters are cute and clever – clever enough to be one of the few animals who use tools such as rocks, glass bottles, or even boat hulls to smash shells and access the tasty flesh inside. But researchers studying otters off the coast of California found that certain otters were using these tools more than others, and wanted to understand why. In a new study, published in the journal Science, research biologist Chris Law found that it was females that were using the tools more than the males, in order to access hard-shelled meals like clams and mussels without damaging their teeth.The longest lasting human species (not us) were expert elephant huntersOur cousins, Homo Erectus, inhabited Earth for nearly two million years, and they were capable hunters. An analysis of stone tool manufacturing sites, published in the journal Archaeologies, gives new insight into the high levels of organization and planning by these early humans. Tel Aviv University archeologist Meir Finkel studied the ancient stone quarries in the Hula Valley, and discovered that they were often located on elephant migration routes near water sources – so the humans didn't have far to go to get weapons for slaying and butchering their meals. This triad of elephants, water and stone quarries is present across many Old Stone Age sites where the early humans lived, including South America, Africa and Europe. A plastic that carries the seeds of its own destructionResearchers have been able to integrate spores of a plastic-eating bacteria into plastic to create a material that, over time, eats itself. In a controlled study, scientists found that the bacteria can break down 90 per cent of the soft plastic in the material in about 90 days. Mohammed Arif Rahman, a senior polymer scientist and R&D director of BASF, said they're still working on it with hopes that the bacteria embedded within it will be able to keep on consuming the remaining plastic so as not to generate any microplastics. The proof of concept study was published in the journal Nature Communications. A new book about gravity celebrates failing and fallingWhen theoretical physicist Claudia de Rham didn't quite make the cut as an astronaut candidate, she doubled down on her fascination with the phenomenon of gravity. This puts her on the path of great thinkers like Newton and Einstein who helped us to start to understand what holds the universe together. In a new book, The Beauty of Falling: A life in pursuit of gravity, she ties her personal adventures with her theoretical explorations of gravitational rainbows and the origins of dark matter, and details all the mysteries that still remain about this fundamental feature of reality.
In this bedtime science story, I tell you about Earth during the Pleistocene (aka "the Ice Age"). We explore what the planet was like, its geography, its climate, its fauna (especially the megafauna of mammals like mammoths, saber-toothed tigers, or mastodons), and the rise of the genus Homo, from the first Hominidae to Australopithecus species and various species of archaic humans (Homo Habilis, Homo Erectus, Homo Heidelbergensis, Homo Neanderthalis and finally Homo Sapiens). Listen ad free and get access to bonus content on our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/LightsOutLibrary621 Welcome to Lights Out LibraryJoin me for a sleepy adventure tonight. Sit back, relax, and fall asleep to documentary-style stories read in a calming voice. Learn something new while you enjoy a restful night of sleep. Listen on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@LightsOutLibraryov ¿Quieres escuchar en Español? Echa un vistazo a La Biblioteca de los Sueños!En Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/1t522alsv5RxFsAf9AmYfgEn Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/la-biblioteca-de-los-sue%C3%B1os-documentarios-para-dormir/id1715193755En Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@LaBibliotecadelosSuenosov
In this week's episode we are joined once again by the mighty Tim Hacker of the Cryptic Chronicles Podcast to determine, once and for all, if it's true that HUMANS ARE NOT FROM EARTH! In the first half of the show we zero in on the technical data concerning what makes humans so spectacularly violent and whether this quality is natural or not. We even tackle the issue as it is portrayed archetypically in a deck of Tarot cards. Afterwards we consider if earth is a penal colony or just a masters program for masochistic souls with nothing better to do before taking a closer look at the mysterious codes in our genome the mainstream dubs “junk DNA.” In the extended version of the show we look at the facts which support the claim that humans are clearly the evolutionary descendants of an aquatic brand of water dwelling apes. After seeing the evidence for yourself you may just walk away convinced. Once that's squared away we move onto the topic of penis bones, depression and what exactly our home planet must have been like. Thank you and enjoy the show! Don't forget to check out Tim's other spectacular content at www.CrypticChronicles.comOn the free section of the show we discuss:Chimpanzee WarsSenseless Violence The Emperor and the MoonViolence and Brain ChemistryEarth: Prison PlanetExtraterrestrial and Junk DNAIn the extended version of the show available at www.patreon.com/TheWholeRabbitwe go further down the rabbit hole to discuss:Aquatic Ape Theory!Why Humans Have ChinsBaby Got Baculum (Penis Bone)The Missing LinkWhy Humans Get Depressed What Our Home Planet is Like…Each host is responsible for writing and creating the content they present. Most sections of this episode were prepared by Tim Hacker of the Cryptic Chronicles Podcast available at CrypticChronicles.com In the notes: red sections are written by Luke Madrid, green sections by Malachor 5, purple written by Heka Astra and blue by Mari Sama.Where to find The Whole Rabbit:Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/0AnJZhmPzaby04afmEWOAVInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/the_whole_rabbitTwitter: https://twitter.com/1WholeRabbitMusic By Spirit Travel Plaza: https://open.spotify.com/artist/30dW3WB1sYofnow7y3V0YoSources:Ellis, Silver: Humans Are Not From EarthSupport the show
On this week's episode we are joined again by our favorite guest-host, the powerful Tim Hacker, the one and only creator of the highly entertaining Cryptic Chronicles podcast to explore the claims Dr. Ellis Silver makes in his book “Humans Are Not From Earth!” Could his claim be true? We discuss and even debate a number of compelling arguments he makes including humanity's problematic relationship to the sun, the magic of melanin, what happened to our fur, why we have so much of it on our genitals, our strange immune systems, if humans were meant to eat meat, why kids hate vegetables and what our home planet is actually like. In the extended edition of the show we go further down the rabbit hole and discuss when we probably arrived on Earth, other ancient humanoids, why our backs hurt all the time, the irregularity of the human circadian rhythm, our lack of natural defenses and how incredibly alien the human gestation cycle really is. Make sure to come back next week for part 2! Thank you everybody and enjoy the show! On this week's episode we discuss:Nictitating MembranesThe Missing Link?Naked SkinPubic Hair!Do Animals Feel Pain?Hairless Apes?Pathogens If Humans are Meant To Eat MeatWhy Kids Hate VegetablesIn the extended version of the episode available at www.patreon.com/TheWholeRabbit we go further down the rabbit hole to discuss:What Our Home Planet Is Like Humanity's Pain in the BackLack of Natural DefensesCarbon DioxideHuman Babies are Broken Vaginal Fluids Each host is responsible for writing and creating the content they present. Most sections of this episode were prepared by Tim Hacker of the Cryptic Chronicles Podcast available at CrypticChronicles.com In the notes: red sections are written by Luke Madrid, green sections by Malachor 5, purple written by Heka Astra and blue by Mari Sama.Where to find The Whole Rabbit:Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/0AnJZhmPzaby04afmEWOAVInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/the_whole_rabbitTwitter: https://twitter.com/1WholeRabbitMusic By Spirit Travel Plaza: https://open.spotify.com/artist/30dW3WB1sYofnow7y3V0YoSources:Ellis, Silver: Humans Are Not From EarthSupport the show
Homo erectus, or "Upright Man," has been upheld as a piece of mankind's "evolutionary history" since its discovery in 1891. But what exactly is this supposed ancestor? How old is it really? Host Trey and Dr. Jeff Tomkins discuss this vital topic on episode 68 of The Creation Podcast!
Cet épisode vous est proposé gratuitement en partenariat avec ISpeakSpokeSpoken.com la plus grande communauté d'apprentissage de l'anglais en France sponsorise cet épisode. Recevez gratuitement votre challenge PDF pour vous (re)mettre à l'anglais en 4 semaines en suivant le lien créé pour vous : www.ispeakspokespoken.com/timeline Au commencement de l'histoire humaine, il y a environ 2,4 millions d'années, les premiers membres de la lignée humaine, les hominidés, ont émergé en Afrique. L'évolution progressive a conduit à l'apparition d'Homo habilis, doté d'outils rudimentaires. Homo Erectus a ensuite émergé, montrant des avancées significatives dans la capacité de fabrication d'outils et la migration hors de l'Afrique. Il y a environ 300 000 ans, Homo sapiens, notre espèce moderne, a fait son apparition, caractérisé par une intelligence accrue et des capacités sociales développées. Les débuts de l'humanité ont été façonnés par l'innovation, la coopération et la migration, créant une riche histoire que nous continuons d'explorer et de partager aujourd'hui ... #HistoireHumaine #Évolution #Communauté Pour les élèves de 5è, la saison 2 : - Le temps des Francs - Le temps de l'Empire romain d'Orient - Le temps de l'Islam - Le temps de l'empire arabe - Le temps des Carolingiens - Le temps des invasions vikings - Le temps de la Féodalité - Le temps des Croisades - Le temps des Plantagenêts - Le temps du Grand Royaume - Le temps d'une Guerre de 100 ans - Le temps d'une Reconquête et d'une Découverte - Le temps des Guerres d'Italie - Le temps de la Réforme
Cet épisode vous est proposé gratuitement en partenariat avec ISpeakSpokeSpoken.com la plus grande communauté d'apprentissage de l'anglais en France sponsorise cet épisode. Recevez gratuitement votre challenge PDF pour vous (re)mettre à l'anglais en 4 semaines en suivant le lien créé pour vous : www.ispeakspokespoken.com/timeline Au commencement de l'histoire humaine, il y a environ 2,4 millions d'années, les premiers membres de la lignée humaine, les hominidés, ont émergé en Afrique. L'évolution progressive a conduit à l'apparition d'Homo habilis, doté d'outils rudimentaires. Homo Erectus a ensuite émergé, montrant des avancées significatives dans la capacité de fabrication d'outils et la migration hors de l'Afrique. Il y a environ 300 000 ans, Homo sapiens, notre espèce moderne, a fait son apparition, caractérisé par une intelligence accrue et des capacités sociales développées. Les débuts de l'humanité ont été façonnés par l'innovation, la coopération et la migration, créant une riche histoire que nous continuons d'explorer et de partager aujourd'hui ... #HistoireHumaine #Évolution #Communauté Pour les élèves de 6è, la saison 1 : - Le Temps des Hommes - Le Temps des Eleveurs - Le Temps des Agriculteurs - Le Temps de l'Ecriture et des Etats - Le Temps ces Cités Grecques - Le Temps de Rome - Le Temps de la République jusqu'à l'Empire romain - Le Temps de la Paix Romaine - Le Temps des Invasions
In this episode, Xavier Bonilla has a dialogue with Peter Bellwood about the five million year history of humans. They discuss the genera and species of humans and the different types of humans that lived together at the same time, genes from early human species, and the four acts of human history. They talk about Hominins arising out of the Miocene, distinct features of Australopithecus, humans in the Pleistocene, Homo Erectus walking out of Africa, Homo Floresiensis, and Neanderthals. They discuss domestication and cultivation of plants and animals in the Holocene, rice and corn in the Fertile Crescent and in China, Maize in the Western Hemisphere, Anatolian hypothesis for languages, and many other topics. Peter Bellwood is Emeritus Professor in archaeology at Australian National University. He has his PhD from Kings College-Cambridge. His research areas have focused on population migrations during prehistory eras and the spread of Austronesian languages. He is the author of numerous books, including his most recent book, The Five-Million-Year Odyssey: The Human Journey from Ape to Agriculture. Get full access to Converging Dialogues at convergingdialogues.substack.com/subscribe
Cet épisode vous est proposé gratuitement en partenariat avec ISpeakSpokeSpoken.com la plus grande communauté d'apprentissage de l'anglais en France sponsorise cet épisode. Recevez gratuitement votre challenge PDF pour vous (re)mettre à l'anglais en 4 semaines en suivant le lien créé pour vous : www.ispeakspokespoken.com/timeline Au commencement de l'histoire humaine, il y a environ 2,4 millions d'années, les premiers membres de la lignée humaine, les hominidés, ont émergé en Afrique. L'évolution progressive a conduit à l'apparition d'Homo habilis, doté d'outils rudimentaires. Homo Erectus a ensuite émergé, montrant des avancées significatives dans la capacité de fabrication d'outils et la migration hors de l'Afrique. Il y a environ 300 000 ans, Homo sapiens, notre espèce moderne, a fait son apparition, caractérisé par une intelligence accrue et des capacités sociales développées. Les débuts de l'humanité ont été façonnés par l'innovation, la coopération et la migration, créant une riche histoire que nous continuons d'explorer et de partager aujourd'hui ... #HistoireHumaine #Évolution #Communauté Pour les élèves de 6è, la saison 1 : - Le Temps des Hommes - Le Temps des Eleveurs - Le Temps des Agriculteurs - Le Temps de l'Ecriture et des Etats - Le Temps ces Cités Grecques - Le Temps de Rome - Le Temps de la République jusqu'à l'Empire romain - Le Temps de la Paix Romaine - Le Temps des Invasions
Cet épisode vous est proposé gratuitement en partenariat avec ISpeakSpokeSpoken.com la plus grande communauté d'apprentissage de l'anglais en France sponsorise cet épisode. Recevez gratuitement votre challenge PDF pour vous (re)mettre à l'anglais en 4 semaines en suivant le lien créé pour vous : www.ispeakspokespoken.com/timeline Au commencement de l'histoire humaine, il y a environ 2,4 millions d'années, les premiers membres de la lignée humaine, les hominidés, ont émergé en Afrique. L'évolution progressive a conduit à l'apparition d'Homo habilis, doté d'outils rudimentaires. Homo Erectus a ensuite émergé, montrant des avancées significatives dans la capacité de fabrication d'outils et la migration hors de l'Afrique. Il y a environ 300 000 ans, Homo sapiens, notre espèce moderne, a fait son apparition, caractérisé par une intelligence accrue et des capacités sociales développées. Les débuts de l'humanité ont été façonnés par l'innovation, la coopération et la migration, créant une riche histoire que nous continuons d'explorer et de partager aujourd'hui ... #HistoireHumaine #Évolution #Communauté Pour les élèves de 6è, la saison 1 : - Le Temps des Hommes - Le Temps des Eleveurs - Le Temps des Agriculteurs - Le Temps de l'Ecriture et des Etats - Le Temps ces Cités Grecques - Le Temps de Rome - Le Temps de la République jusqu'à l'Empire romain - Le Temps de la Paix Romaine - Le Temps des Invasions
Cet épisode vous est proposé gratuitement en partenariat avec ISpeakSpokeSpoken.com la plus grande communauté d'apprentissage de l'anglais en France sponsorise cet épisode. Recevez gratuitement votre challenge PDF pour vous (re)mettre à l'anglais en 4 semaines en suivant le lien créé pour vous : www.ispeakspokespoken.com/timeline Au commencement de l'histoire humaine, il y a environ 2,4 millions d'années, les premiers membres de la lignée humaine, les hominidés, ont émergé en Afrique. L'évolution progressive a conduit à l'apparition d'Homo habilis, doté d'outils rudimentaires. Homo Erectus a ensuite émergé, montrant des avancées significatives dans la capacité de fabrication d'outils et la migration hors de l'Afrique. Il y a environ 300 000 ans, Homo sapiens, notre espèce moderne, a fait son apparition, caractérisé par une intelligence accrue et des capacités sociales développées. Les débuts de l'humanité ont été façonnés par l'innovation, la coopération et la migration, créant une riche histoire que nous continuons d'explorer et de partager aujourd'hui ... #HistoireHumaine #Évolution #Communauté Pour les élèves de 6è, la saison 1 : - Le Temps des Hommes - Le Temps des Eleveurs - Le Temps des Agriculteurs - Le Temps de l'Ecriture et des Etats - Le Temps ces Cités Grecques - Le Temps de Rome - Le Temps de la République jusqu'à l'Empire romain - Le Temps de la Paix Romaine - Le Temps des Invasions
Cet épisode vous est proposé gratuitement en partenariat avec ISpeakSpokeSpoken.com la plus grande communauté d'apprentissage de l'anglais en France sponsorise cet épisode. Recevez gratuitement votre challenge PDF pour vous (re)mettre à l'anglais en 4 semaines en suivant le lien créé pour vous : www.ispeakspokespoken.com/timeline Au commencement de l'histoire humaine, il y a environ 2,4 millions d'années, les premiers membres de la lignée humaine, les hominidés, ont émergé en Afrique. L'évolution progressive a conduit à l'apparition d'Homo habilis, doté d'outils rudimentaires. Homo Erectus a ensuite émergé, montrant des avancées significatives dans la capacité de fabrication d'outils et la migration hors de l'Afrique. Il y a environ 300 000 ans, Homo sapiens, notre espèce moderne, a fait son apparition, caractérisé par une intelligence accrue et des capacités sociales développées. Les débuts de l'humanité ont été façonnés par l'innovation, la coopération et la migration, créant une riche histoire que nous continuons d'explorer et de partager aujourd'hui ... #HistoireHumaine #Évolution #Communauté Pour les élèves de 6è, la saison 1 : - Le Temps des Hommes - Le Temps des Eleveurs - Le Temps des Agriculteurs - Le Temps de l'Ecriture et des Etats - Le Temps ces Cités Grecques - Le Temps de Rome - Le Temps de la République jusqu'à l'Empire romain - Le Temps de la Paix Romaine - Le Temps des Invasions
Cet épisode vous est proposé gratuitement en partenariat avec ISpeakSpokeSpoken.com la plus grande communauté d'apprentissage de l'anglais en France sponsorise cet épisode. Recevez gratuitement votre challenge PDF pour vous (re)mettre à l'anglais en 4 semaines en suivant le lien créé pour vous : www.ispeakspokespoken.com/timeline Au commencement de l'histoire humaine, il y a environ 2,4 millions d'années, les premiers membres de la lignée humaine, les hominidés, ont émergé en Afrique. L'évolution progressive a conduit à l'apparition d'Homo habilis, doté d'outils rudimentaires. Homo Erectus a ensuite émergé, montrant des avancées significatives dans la capacité de fabrication d'outils et la migration hors de l'Afrique. Il y a environ 300 000 ans, Homo sapiens, notre espèce moderne, a fait son apparition, caractérisé par une intelligence accrue et des capacités sociales développées. Les débuts de l'humanité ont été façonnés par l'innovation, la coopération et la migration, créant une riche histoire que nous continuons d'explorer et de partager aujourd'hui ... #HistoireHumaine #Évolution #Communauté Pour les élèves de 6è, la saison 1 : - Le Temps des Hommes - Le Temps des Eleveurs - Le Temps des Agriculteurs - Le Temps de l'Ecriture et des Etats - Le Temps ces Cités Grecques - Le Temps de Rome - Le Temps de la République jusqu'à l'Empire romain - Le Temps de la Paix Romaine - Le Temps des Invasions
Cet épisode vous est proposé gratuitement en partenariat avec ISpeakSpokeSpoken.com la plus grande communauté d'apprentissage de l'anglais en France sponsorise cet épisode. Recevez gratuitement votre challenge PDF pour vous (re)mettre à l'anglais en 4 semaines en suivant le lien créé pour vous : www.ispeakspokespoken.com/timeline Au commencement de l'histoire humaine, il y a environ 2,4 millions d'années, les premiers membres de la lignée humaine, les hominidés, ont émergé en Afrique. L'évolution progressive a conduit à l'apparition d'Homo habilis, doté d'outils rudimentaires. Homo Erectus a ensuite émergé, montrant des avancées significatives dans la capacité de fabrication d'outils et la migration hors de l'Afrique. Il y a environ 300 000 ans, Homo sapiens, notre espèce moderne, a fait son apparition, caractérisé par une intelligence accrue et des capacités sociales développées. Les débuts de l'humanité ont été façonnés par l'innovation, la coopération et la migration, créant une riche histoire que nous continuons d'explorer et de partager aujourd'hui ... #HistoireHumaine #Évolution #Communauté Pour les élèves de 6è, la saison 1 : - Le Temps des Hommes - Le Temps des Eleveurs - Le Temps des Agriculteurs - Le Temps de l'Ecriture et des Etats - Le Temps ces Cités Grecques - Le Temps de Rome - Le Temps de la République jusqu'à l'Empire romain - Le Temps de la Paix Romaine - Le Temps des Invasions
The Adama Project- Breakdown Adamites & Genetic Splicing --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/beyond-ether/message
The OG, greatest generation of Human ever! At least if your metric is a dogged determination to keep existing.For 2 million years these prehistoric hominins wandered far and wide, high and low, filling every available lakeshore and riverbed. What can we know about them? Their looks, abilities, traits? Did they use fire? Language? Clothing? Where did they come from and get to?And why, after such a successful run, did they exit the world stage?Today on the History of Being Human, the essential guide to all things Erectus.This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/5806452/advertisement
Au commencement de l'histoire humaine, il y a environ 2,4 millions d'années, les premiers membres de la lignée humaine, les hominidés, ont émergé en Afrique. L'évolution progressive a conduit à l'apparition d'Homo habilis, doté d'outils rudimentaires. Homo Erectus a ensuite émergé, montrant des avancées significatives dans la capacité de fabrication d'outils et la migration hors de l'Afrique. Il y a environ 300 000 ans, Homo sapiens, notre espèce moderne, a fait son apparition, caractérisé par une intelligence accrue et des capacités sociales développées. Les débuts de l'humanité ont été façonnés par l'innovation, la coopération et la migration, créant une riche histoire que nous continuons d'explorer et de partager aujourd'hui ... #HistoireHumaine #Évolution #Communauté Pour les élèves de 6è, la saison 1 : - Le Temps des Hommes - Le Temps des Eleveurs - Le Temps des Agriculteurs - Le Temps de l'Ecriture et des Etats - Le Temps ces Cités Grecques - Le Temps de Rome - Le Temps de la République jusqu'à l'Empire romain - Le Temps de la Paix Romaine - Le Temps des Invasions
Au commencement de l'histoire humaine, il y a environ 2,4 millions d'années, les premiers membres de la lignée humaine, les hominidés, ont émergé en Afrique. L'évolution progressive a conduit à l'apparition d'Homo habilis, doté d'outils rudimentaires. Homo Erectus a ensuite émergé, montrant des avancées significatives dans la capacité de fabrication d'outils et la migration hors de l'Afrique. Il y a environ 300 000 ans, Homo sapiens, notre espèce moderne, a fait son apparition, caractérisé par une intelligence accrue et des capacités sociales développées. Les débuts de l'humanité ont été façonnés par l'innovation, la coopération et la migration, créant une riche histoire que nous continuons d'explorer et de partager aujourd'hui ... #HistoireHumaine #Évolution #Communauté Pour les élèves de 6è, la saison 1 : - Le Temps des Hommes - Le Temps des Eleveurs - Le Temps des Agriculteurs - Le Temps de l'Ecriture et des Etats - Le Temps ces Cités Grecques - Le Temps de Rome - Le Temps de la République jusqu'à l'Empire romain - Le Temps de la Paix Romaine - Le Temps des Invasions
On today's Good Day Download:Apparently not every athlete on Team USA practiced good sportsmanship during the Women's World Cup, a collegiate-level football player gives his scholarship to his teammate, a new measurement of tiny particles deepen the mystery in physics, and we remember musician Robbie Robertson. We discuss. A 300,000-year-old skull of a past human species is found in China, human trafficking is on the rise and happening in every state, and an Ecuadorian presidential candidate is assassinated during a campaign rally less than two weeks before the election. We discuss that, too.Nik Miles, OurAutoExpert.com, joins to discuss the latest updates in automotive news -- like the rise in prices, electric vehicles, and more. Get more information on GoodDayShow.comFollow us on social media. Meta - @GoodDayRadioShowX - @GoodDayOnAirThis show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/4342406/advertisement
Seriah is joined by Barbara Fisher, Superinfra Man, and Chris Ernst to discuss some recent news stories. Topics include a study of NDEs, OBEs, the fullness of the NDE experience and the limitations of materialism, the difficulties of measurement, the scientific method and its limits, ghosts, the Philip experiment, Bigfoot, spirits, tulpas, souls of the dead, Karen Woodhouse, fakery in reality TV ghost hunting, anecdotal evidence, an ancient pre-Homo Sapien species conducting burial rituals and carving symbols, Neanderthals, Homo Erectus, entheogens, primates using drugs, brain size vs intelligence, Graham Hancock, lost history, hoarding of art and artifacts by wealthy collectors, Black Water Inc, Iraq, Hobby Lobby, “Evil Archeology” by Heather Lynn, a strange moving anomaly in the Earth's magnetic field, weird zones in the magnetic field beneath South America and Africa, a story of AI replacing counselors in an eating disorder helpline, the dubious nature of AI, a bad experience with a weaponized AI drone, Isaac Asimov and the 3 laws of robotics, the importance of empathy, Artificial Intelligence vs mimicry, AI art and content, AI podcasts and audio books, deficiencies in internet information, lack of creativity in pop culture, the pluses and minuses of retail self-check-out, AI pioneer inventors calling for regulation and issuing warnings, Terence McKenna and novelty, the films “WALL-E” and “Elysium”, depopulation conspiracy theories vs the worker shortage, younger peoples' reluctance to have children, life-extending drugs and procedures, Elon Musk, the series “Altered Carbon”, transhumanism, the life model decoy, the “Subjective Truth” podcast, a consciousness box that traps souls, “Babylon 5”, Hollywood re-boots including “Star Wars” and “Harry Potter”, the movie “12 Monkeys” and the subsequent art film and series, Chris Marker, Whitley Strieber's “A New World”, Indian Vedic cosmology, other worlds that lack emotion, Sufism, agape love, the series “Westworld”, free will vs predestination, computers turning on humans, reality tunnels, journalism vs entertainment, pro wrestling, 9/11 anti-terrorism drills, conspiracy theories and psyops, the TV series “The Lazarus Project”, an enormous metal structure discovered at the Moon's south pole, bizarre lunar facts and theories, disappointments of the space program, Gary Nolan, Robert Heinlein's “Stranger in a Strange Land”, reasons why aliens would avoid human contact, a theory of empathy and the Black Plague, empathy and narcissism, Lobo Matias, Ronald Reagan and peace through a common alien enemy, a warning from Space Force General Chance Saltzman, xenobots, programable robots made from frog cells, consciousness vs sentience, “The Last of Us”, the film “The Day After”, and much more! This is some fascinating discussion, not to be missed!
Galactic History Neanderthal And Homo Erectus Crystal Skulls The Olmecs by Ivan Teller
Seriah is joined by Barbara Fisher, Superinfra Man, and Chris Ernst to discuss some recent news stories. Topics include a study of NDEs, OBEs, the fullness of the NDE experience and the limitations of materialism, the difficulties of measurement, the scientific method and its limits, ghosts, the Philip experiment, Bigfoot, spirits, tulpas, souls of the dead, Karen Woodhouse, fakery in reality TV ghost hunting, anecdotal evidence, an ancient pre-Homo Sapien species conducting burial rituals and carving symbols, Neanderthals, Homo Erectus, entheogens, primates using drugs, brain size vs intelligence, Graham Hancock, lost history, hoarding of art and artifacts by wealthy collectors, Black Water Inc, Iraq, Hobby Lobby, “Evil Archeology” by Heather Lynn, a strange moving anomaly in the Earth's magnetic field, weird zones in the magnetic field beneath South America and Africa, a story of AI replacing counselors in an eating disorder helpline, the dubious nature of AI, a bad experience with a weaponized AI drone, Isaac Asimov and the 3 laws of robotics, the importance of empathy, Artificial Intelligence vs mimicry, AI art and content, AI podcasts and audio books, deficiencies in internet information, lack of creativity in pop culture, the pluses and minuses of retail self-check-out, AI pioneer inventors calling for regulation and issuing warnings, Terence McKenna and novelty, the films “WALL-E” and “Elysium”, depopulation conspiracy theories vs the worker shortage, younger peoples' reluctance to have children, life-extending drugs and procedures, Elon Musk, the series “Altered Carbon”, transhumanism, the life model decoy, the “Subjective Truth” podcast, a consciousness box that traps souls, “Babylon 5”, Hollywood re-boots including “Star Wars” and “Harry Potter”, the movie “12 Monkeys” and the subsequent art film and series, Chris Marker, Whitley Strieber's “A New World”, Indian Vedic cosmology, other worlds that lack emotion, Sufism, agape love, the series “Westworld”, free will vs predestination, computers turning on humans, reality tunnels, journalism vs entertainment, pro wrestling, 9/11 anti-terrorism drills, conspiracy theories and psyops, the TV series “The Lazarus Project”, an enormous metal structure discovered at the Moon's south pole, bizarre lunar facts and theories, disappointments of the space program, Gary Nolan, Robert Heinlein's “Stranger in a Strange Land”, reasons why aliens would avoid human contact, a theory of empathy and the Black Plague, empathy and narcissism, Lobo Matias, Ronald Reagan and peace through a common alien enemy, a warning from Space Force General Chance Saltzman, xenobots, programable robots made from frog cells, consciousness vs sentience, “The Last of Us”, the film “The Day After”, and much more! This is some fascinating discussion, not to be missed! - Recap by Vincent Treewell of The Weird Part Podcast Outro Music is Whirring World from Psyche Corporation Download
The discovery of a Homo erectus skull in 2005, known as Skull 5, marked a significant archaeological find. Among the five skulls found, estimated to be approximately 1.8 million years old, Skull 5 stands out as the most complete hominin skull ever uncovered. Remarkably, it had remained hidden within a cave for nearly two million years before its discovery. Evolution Talk is also a book! You can find links to Amazon, Barnes & Noble and others on the front page of EvolutionTalk.com, or call your local bookstore and ask them to order a copy. Music in this Episode River Fire by Kevin MacLeod, Free download: https://filmmusic.io/song/4294-river-fire, License (CC BY 4.0): https://filmmusic.io/standard-license Slow Heat by Kevin MacLeod, Free download: https://filmmusic.io/song/4373-slow-heat, License (CC BY 4.0): https://filmmusic.io/standard-license Allada by Kevin MacLeod, Free download: https://filmmusic.io/song/4981-allada, License (CC BY 4.0): https://filmmusic.io/standard-license Rite of Passage by Kevin MacLeod, Free download: https://filmmusic.io/song/4291-rite-of-passage, License (CC BY 4.0): https://filmmusic.io/standard-license
Episode: 2516 The Atapuerca dig and a missing link: Homo Antecessor. Today, the Atapuerca dig.
Today's ID the Future spotlights a new free online ID book from South Africa, Science and Faith in Dialogue, with contributions from Stephen Meyer, Hugh Ross, Guillermo Gonzalez, James Tour, Fazale Rana, Marcos Eberlin, and others. Geologist Casey Luskin joins host Eric Anderson to tell how the new peer-reviewed book came together and to describe the chapter he contributed, “Evolutionary Models of Palaeoanthropology, Genetics, and Psychology Fail to Account for Human Origins: A Review.” Luskin did his PhD in South Africa and had many opportunities to study various hominid fossils. Here he explains why he is convinced that intelligent design far better explains the fossil evidence than does Darwinian evolution. Source
Episode: 2490 In which footprints, 1.5 and 3.6 million years old, tell their story. Today, we walk in some very old footsteps.
Before modern humans walked the earth, and even before the Neanderthals, Homo Erectus dominated the plains of Africa. Eventually migrating across the land, with evidence of their existence being found in locations like Java, Homo Erectus survived for 2 million years. But how did they succeed where others failed, and become the most wide spread human species on earth at this time?In this episode, Tristan is joined by Professor John McNabb from the University of Southampton, to explore the fascinating history of Homo Erectus. Looking at a number of tools they used to survive, including a pre-historic Swiss Army Knife, what can the archaeology tell us about the evolution of humankind and can we learn anything from our distant ancestors?For more Ancients content, subscribe to our Ancients newsletter here. If you'd like to learn even more, we have hundreds of history documentaries, ad free podcasts and audiobooks at History Hit - enter promo code ANCIENTS for a free trial, plus 50% off your first three months' subscription.To download, go to Android > or Apple store > Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this episode Jacob and Evan engage in yet another long-winded conversation:Who was Mao Zedong, and what was his famed pastime? What great invention propelled Homo Erectus, and humanity, forward? What connects the Inuit and Sami peoples, and how did this connection change Alaska forever?Why is Iran in turmoil, and how does this reflect its recent past?Where do we start when reconstructing languages, and are there ways to bring back lost ones? Support the show
This week we happened to find 3 news stories about evidence for eating and cooking food in the ancient world. First up is the first evidence of Homo Erectus cooking fish 780,000 years ago. Then, we fast forward to 70,000 years ago and leftover evidence of a Neanderthal meal gives us insight into how they prepared food. And finally, in Rome new excavations under the coliseum reveal the kind of snacks that spectators would have enjoyed.For our members, we have a bonus segment describing how one journalist attempted to recreate the Neanderthal meal that we discussed in segment 2!Links Evidence of cooking 780,000 years ago rewrites human history Oldest cooked leftovers ever found suggest Neanderthals were foodies. Archaeologists Find 1,900-Year-Old Snacks in Sewers Beneath the ColosseumContact Chris Websterchris@archaeologypodcastnetwork.com Rachel Rodenrachel@unraveleddesigns.comRachelUnraveled (Instagram)ArchPodNet APN Website: https://www.archpodnet.com APN on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/archpodnet APN on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/archpodnet APN on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/archpodnet Tee Public StoreAffiliates Wildnote TeePublic Timeular Motion
Geri Dönüyoruz sezon arasına doğru geri sayarken bu yeni bölümünde ortaya ateşi koyuyor, onun etrafında toplanıyor. Ateşin toplumların tarihindeki ve kültürlerdeki yeri, insanı diğer primatlardan ayıran itici güç olarak ateşin değeri konu ediliyor. Mahir Ünsal Eriş ve Töre Sivrioğlu, Ortadoğu'dan Uzak Asya'ya, Homo Erectus'tan modern insana ateşi elden ele taşıyor, Promoeteus'un insanlığa mirasını konuşuyor.
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss one of our ancestors, Homo erectus, who thrived on Earth for around two million years whereas we, Homo sapiens, emerged only in the last three hundred thousand years. Homo erectus, or Upright Man, spread from Africa to Asia and it was on the Island of Java that fossilised remains were found in 1891 in an expedition led by Dutch scientist Eugène Dubois. Homo erectus people adapted to different habitats, ate varied food, lived in groups, had stamina to outrun their prey; and discoveries have prompted many theories on the relationship between their diet and the size of their brains, on their ability as seafarers, on their creativity and on their ability to speak and otherwise communicate. The image above is from a diorama at the Moesgaard Museum in Denmark, depicting the Turkana Boy referred to in the programme. With Peter Kjærgaard Director of the Natural History Museum of Denmark and Professor of Evolutionary History at the University of Copenhagen José Joordens Senior Researcher in Human Evolution at Naturalis Biodiversity Centre and Professor of Human Evolution at Maastricht University And Mark Maslin Professor of Earth System Science at University College London Producer: Simon Tillotson
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss one of our ancestors, Homo erectus, who thrived on Earth for around two million years whereas we, Homo sapiens, emerged only in the last three hundred thousand years. Homo erectus, or Upright Man, spread from Africa to Asia and it was on the Island of Java that fossilised remains were found in 1891 in an expedition led by Dutch scientist Eugène Dubois. Homo erectus people adapted to different habitats, ate varied food, lived in groups, had stamina to outrun their prey; and discoveries have prompted many theories on the relationship between their diet and the size of their brains, on their ability as seafarers, on their creativity and on their ability to speak and otherwise communicate. The image above is from a diorama at the Moesgaard Museum in Denmark, depicting the Turkana Boy referred to in the programme. With Peter Kjærgaard Director of the Natural History Museum of Denmark and Professor of Evolutionary History at the University of Copenhagen José Joordens Senior Researcher in Human Evolution at Naturalis Biodiversity Centre and Professor of Human Evolution at Maastricht University And Mark Maslin Professor of Earth System Science at University College London Producer: Simon Tillotson
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss one of our ancestors, Homo erectus, who thrived on Earth for around two million years whereas we, Homo sapiens, emerged only in the last three hundred thousand years. Homo erectus, or Upright Man, spread from Africa to Asia and it was on the Island of Java that fossilised remains were found in 1891 in an expedition led by Dutch scientist Eugène Dubois. Homo erectus people adapted to different habitats, ate varied food, lived in groups, had stamina to outrun their prey; and discoveries have prompted many theories on the relationship between their diet and the size of their brains, on their ability as seafarers, on their creativity and on their ability to speak and otherwise communicate. The image above is from a diorama at the Moesgaard Museum in Denmark, depicting the Turkana Boy referred to in the programme. With Peter Kjærgaard Director of the Natural History Museum of Denmark and Professor of Evolutionary History at the University of Copenhagen José Joordens Senior Researcher in Human Evolution at Naturalis Biodiversity Centre and Professor of Human Evolution at Maastricht University And Mark Maslin Professor of Earth System Science at University College London Producer: Simon Tillotson