Say my name wrote: » Neanderthals though.
murpho999 wrote: » I don't think life was good for them. Constant search for food, shelter problems, rival tribe wars and then at any moment you could get eaten by a dinosaur. Plucked into the air by a teradactyl is not a nice way to go as shown in below scene from a documentary of the time .
_Brian wrote: » I’d say the biggest contribution to their happiness was the lack of vegans and their rhetoric.
fatknacker wrote: » It’s all well and good til you have an incredibly painful infection from a simple cut that goes septic, a neighbouring tribe keeps taking your friend’s scalps and a sabre tooth tiger eats your babies.
artanevilla wrote: » I often dream of simpler times. Then I take my rose-tinted glasses off, and my real glasses, realize I'd be fúcked with my eyesight and am quite content in a world with lenses.
topper75 wrote: » My forefathers just shagged them. Well, 3% of them did. Something different like.
Wibbs wrote: » Funny enough modern hunter gatherers rarely suffer from myopia. Something in our modern world seems to cause short sightedness. It's been suggested that modern people from the time they're toddlers view more close objects more consistently and in some this may cause myopia. Well your foremothers did, as the genes seem to go from Neandertal men to modern women. Maybe their guys were more of a draw for our women? Well they were significantly more physically powerful than modern human blokes so there's that. There isn't an MMA fighter alive that would last more than a few seconds up close and personal with one of those guys. Or male children produced had some genetic weaknesses because of our genetic differences and distance and didn't survive or were sub fertile. And there would have been a fair bit of shagging for 3% to survive in our DNA down to today at least 30,000 years later. The frozen lad they found in the alps Otzi the iceman had higher Neandertal percentages(over double IIRC) than modern people because he was over 5000 years closer to when we got jiggy with each other. Even older modern Human DNA in Europe shows even higher percentages and longer sequences from them. One lad from Russia IIRC who is 30 odd 1000 years old had a great grandparent that was a full Neandertal. Funny enough they haven't yet found a Neandertal with our DNA in their mix. It seems to have helped us adapt to local environments as some of the genes involved are for immune responses.
Savannah Lazy Gynecologist wrote: » What about the Rh(Neg) folks, whom don't have any direct lineage to the rhesus monkey. Might Nibiru's Anunnaki, as per ancient Summerian folklore, account for their introduction.
Doctors room ghost wrote: » Any early macks yet nthclare down yere way off the rocks?
mr_fegelien wrote: » Isn't there a link between people with Rh - blood and alien abductions?
mr_fegelien wrote: » You seem to know about neanderthals. Let me ask you this, is the lack of neanderthal DNA among black Sub-Saharan Africans the reason they have such different features (nappy hair, round nose) compared to all other races on earth?
murpho999 wrote: » I don't think life was good for them. Constant search for food, shelter problems, rival tribe wars and then at any moment you could get eaten by a dinosaur. Plucked into the air by a teradactyl is not a nice way to go as shown in below scene from a documentary of the time .https://media1.giphy.com/media/3o7btPrZ2LcjasECPe/giphy.gif?cid=ecf05e47f19ddc3677e8540c114f162bfc151298b20b11ee&rid=giphy.gif
Savannah Lazy Gynecologist wrote: » Allegedly, one survey stated that 6%* of Americans reckon they've been abducted i.e. probed or used for a hybrid program, usually by the 'Greys'. Most likely hypnagogic or predormital sleep paralysis after a Budweiser Export 6-pack, rather than a 'cosmic kidnap trouser romance'. We the the Rh(Neg) {not from the monkey} *6%'ers (circa global population) are often smarter than you/your average Neanderthal knuckledraggers, with a range of additional skills (allegedly).
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » But we've faced some nasty critters in the past. Today everything in Oz is trying to kill you. But when modern humans arrived there were salt water crocs, and huge freshwater crocks and long legged fast running land crocs the size of sea crocs and venomous komodo dragons the size of long legged fast running land crocs. And marsupial lions and giant snakes like wonambi. Only the salties survived
badabing106 wrote: » That was the peak of happiness for humankind in my opinion Humans were elite hunters and gatherers compelled to thrive and survive in hunting gathering small communities. The days anticipating and preparing for a successful hunt for the community, with all members of the community participating , and realising that dream, and celebrating together must be the highest high a human can have. What is the comparison today? There isn't anything close Childcare, I here you say. No they didn't pay 2k a month to send them to little harvard, the community took turns to look after everyone else's children There is no crime, no jealously over property or possessions. The physical and mental wellbeing through excercise, the community, the bonds was at its peak in this epoch . All their thoughts had to be focused on the wellbeing of the community and honing their skills and enjoying the bliss of the next successful hunt It was a simple and joyous life
nthclare wrote: » There's a few at Dunlicky or Castle Point near Kilkee. Although I'd say if you went out early in the morning around 5am with a light spinning rod and a toby you'd catch some of Liscannor pier... Sometimes when I wake up early I'll go down to the pier and catch a few for breakfast. I tried it in the day time or evening, never caught any. But for some reason before dawn I catch them off that pier...
Doctors room ghost wrote: » You won’t beat a few fresh mackerel filleted and fried in a pan and a bit of proper butter,salt and pepper.throw in a cut of bread and a strong mug of tea and that’s as good as it gets.