Dear One and All,but this is just to allow a few people to join early.
Please consider yourself most cordially invited to the 10th in our WHAT Talks series, this coming Sunday (7th August) at 8pm (West Australian Time).
The Zoom link is at the end of this email. Please feel free to copy this email to anyone who you think might be interested in why we are so different from our chimpanzee and gorilla cousins. Note that the invite to the meeting states a 7:30 pm start,
The meeting is scheduled to start on the hour at 8pm and will last about an hour.Elaine's book "The Descent of Woman", she has devoured pretty much everything she could read on the subject.
This month, we are very lucky to have Francesca Mansfield give our talk. Like many of us, she was inspired (at the age of 17!) by Elaine Morgan to take a passionate interest in the fascinating idea that humans may have had a more aquatic past. After
Francesca gave birth to her first child in water, inspired by AAT and one of guest speakers Michel Odent, and her belief that it would be a more natural, easier and relatively less painful form of childbirth (it was).had little time to keep it updated.
Since 2015 she’s been maintaining a website (see link below) which tries to keep up with scientific discoveries in support of AAT. Many of the speakers on WHAT talks are mentioned, although she says she’s lapsed a little in recent years as she’s
Francesca currently works as a yacht broker/charter operator in Greece. She’s always been drawn to the sea and loves being in it, or on it, whenever she can!will be covered in the talk).
She is currently researching / writing a book (working title: Semi-aquatic Human Ancestors – the Evolution of a Theory), based on the accumulating scientific evidence that supports aquatic or semi-aquatic adaptations in humans (an outline of which
Francesca's Web Site: http://aquatic-human-ancestor.org/numerous adaptations in human ...
Semi-Aquatic Human Ancestors
Possible aquatic adaptations in human - Arguments for the aquatic ape hypothesis and related water-based models
Notes: The diagram demonstrates the arguments proposed in the aquatic ape hypothesis (AAH) and related water-based models (e.g. the shore-based diet model), that swimming, diving, and a semi-aquatic lifestyle may have influenced human evolution, caused
aquatic-human-ancestor.orgsomewhere in East Africa, perhaps Afar or the Rift valley during the Pliocene, as this is where/when the oldest “hominins” with bipedal modifications seem to appear, but the science is very weak, with no clear answers about why what happened to human
I for one am really looking forward to hear her angle on some of the concepts that I have been thinking about for so long.
Her talk is entitled...
Semi-Aquatic Human Ancestors: when, where & why?
AAT supporters agree that water has played a morphological role in the evolution of human ancestors, but there remains much debate and little consensus regarding when, where and why this might have happened. Elaine Morgan and many others talked about
It was these unanswered questions that prompted me to delve deeper into the prevailing scientific evidence, established facts and generally accepted paradigms concerning human evolution. To understand when, where and why our ancestors’ aquaticinterlude may have occurred, I decided to start my research from the time when the first apes diverged from other primates, around 25 million years ago, and study the evidence right up to the emergence of clearly definable Homo genus, approximately 2
Francesca Mansfield
Please see our web site for a set of related papers on her talk and more information https://whattalks.com/talks.
Where did they sleep?
Op maandag 1 augustus 2022 om 20:31:57 UTC+2 schreef DD'eDeN aka note/nickname/alas_my_loves:
Where did they sleep?
In a hole in the savanna, of course.
:-DDD
Where do you sleep? Underwater?
The sheltered ground ape:
Where do you sleep? Underwater?My little boy,
please finally grow up:
pregnant women more easily give birth in water than outside...
Now you want to call Congo Pygmy women "aquatic"??
Op woensdag 3 augustus 2022 om 22:11:23 UTC+2 schreef sheltered ground ape:Lol!
Now you want to call Congo Pygmy women "aquatic"?????
My little little little boy, nobody is speaking about congo pygmies aquatic or not...
Waste your own time, keep sheltering in the ground.
Dear One and All,but this is just to allow a few people to join early.
Please consider yourself most cordially invited to the 10th in our WHAT Talks series, this coming Sunday (7th August) at 8pm (West Australian Time).
The Zoom link is at the end of this email. Please feel free to copy this email to anyone who you think might be interested in why we are so different from our chimpanzee and gorilla cousins. Note that the invite to the meeting states a 7:30 pm start,
The meeting is scheduled to start on the hour at 8pm and will last about an hour.Elaine's book "The Descent of Woman", she has devoured pretty much everything she could read on the subject.
This month, we are very lucky to have Francesca Mansfield give our talk. Like many of us, she was inspired (at the age of 17!) by Elaine Morgan to take a passionate interest in the fascinating idea that humans may have had a more aquatic past. After
Francesca gave birth to her first child in water, inspired by AAT and one of guest speakers Michel Odent, and her belief that it would be a more natural, easier and relatively less painful form of childbirth (it was).had little time to keep it updated.
Since 2015 she’s been maintaining a website (see link below) which tries to keep up with scientific discoveries in support of AAT. Many of the speakers on WHAT talks are mentioned, although she says she’s lapsed a little in recent years as she’s
Francesca currently works as a yacht broker/charter operator in Greece. She’s always been drawn to the sea and loves being in it, or on it, whenever she can!will be covered in the talk).
She is currently researching / writing a book (working title: Semi-aquatic Human Ancestors – the Evolution of a Theory), based on the accumulating scientific evidence that supports aquatic or semi-aquatic adaptations in humans (an outline of which
Francesca's Web Site: http://aquatic-human-ancestor.org/numerous adaptations in human ...
Semi-Aquatic Human Ancestors
Possible aquatic adaptations in human - Arguments for the aquatic ape hypothesis and related water-based models
Notes: The diagram demonstrates the arguments proposed in the aquatic ape hypothesis (AAH) and related water-based models (e.g. the shore-based diet model), that swimming, diving, and a semi-aquatic lifestyle may have influenced human evolution, caused
aquatic-human-ancestor.orgsomewhere in East Africa, perhaps Afar or the Rift valley during the Pliocene, as this is where/when the oldest “hominins” with bipedal modifications seem to appear, but the science is very weak, with no clear answers about why what happened to human
I for one am really looking forward to hear her angle on some of the concepts that I have been thinking about for so long.
Her talk is entitled...
Semi-Aquatic Human Ancestors: when, where & why?
AAT supporters agree that water has played a morphological role in the evolution of human ancestors, but there remains much debate and little consensus regarding when, where and why this might have happened. Elaine Morgan and many others talked about
It was these unanswered questions that prompted me to delve deeper into the prevailing scientific evidence, established facts and generally accepted paradigms concerning human evolution. To understand when, where and why our ancestors’ aquaticinterlude may have occurred, I decided to start my research from the time when the first apes diverged from other primates, around 25 million years ago, and study the evidence right up to the emergence of clearly definable Homo genus, approximately 2
Francesca Mansfield
Please see our web site for a set of related papers on her talk and more information https://whattalks.com/talks.
Don't forget ! https://whattalks.com/talks.
Op maandag 1 augustus 2022 om 12:57:04 UTC+2 schreef littor...@gmail.com:but this is just to allow a few people to join early.
Dear One and All,
Please consider yourself most cordially invited to the 10th in our WHAT Talks series, this coming Sunday (7th August) at 8pm (West Australian Time).
The Zoom link is at the end of this email. Please feel free to copy this email to anyone who you think might be interested in why we are so different from our chimpanzee and gorilla cousins. Note that the invite to the meeting states a 7:30 pm start,
Elaine's book "The Descent of Woman", she has devoured pretty much everything she could read on the subject.The meeting is scheduled to start on the hour at 8pm and will last about an hour.
This month, we are very lucky to have Francesca Mansfield give our talk. Like many of us, she was inspired (at the age of 17!) by Elaine Morgan to take a passionate interest in the fascinating idea that humans may have had a more aquatic past. After
s had little time to keep it updated.Francesca gave birth to her first child in water, inspired by AAT and one of guest speakers Michel Odent, and her belief that it would be a more natural, easier and relatively less painful form of childbirth (it was).
Since 2015 she’s been maintaining a website (see link below) which tries to keep up with scientific discoveries in support of AAT. Many of the speakers on WHAT talks are mentioned, although she says she’s lapsed a little in recent years as she’
will be covered in the talk).Francesca currently works as a yacht broker/charter operator in Greece. She’s always been drawn to the sea and loves being in it, or on it, whenever she can!
She is currently researching / writing a book (working title: Semi-aquatic Human Ancestors – the Evolution of a Theory), based on the accumulating scientific evidence that supports aquatic or semi-aquatic adaptations in humans (an outline of which
caused numerous adaptations in human ...Francesca's Web Site: http://aquatic-human-ancestor.org/
Semi-Aquatic Human Ancestors
Possible aquatic adaptations in human - Arguments for the aquatic ape hypothesis and related water-based models
Notes: The diagram demonstrates the arguments proposed in the aquatic ape hypothesis (AAH) and related water-based models (e.g. the shore-based diet model), that swimming, diving, and a semi-aquatic lifestyle may have influenced human evolution,
somewhere in East Africa, perhaps Afar or the Rift valley during the Pliocene, as this is where/when the oldest “hominins” with bipedal modifications seem to appear, but the science is very weak, with no clear answers about why what happened to humanaquatic-human-ancestor.org
I for one am really looking forward to hear her angle on some of the concepts that I have been thinking about for so long.
Her talk is entitled...
Semi-Aquatic Human Ancestors: when, where & why?
AAT supporters agree that water has played a morphological role in the evolution of human ancestors, but there remains much debate and little consensus regarding when, where and why this might have happened. Elaine Morgan and many others talked about
interlude may have occurred, I decided to start my research from the time when the first apes diverged from other primates, around 25 million years ago, and study the evidence right up to the emergence of clearly definable Homo genus, approximately 2It was these unanswered questions that prompted me to delve deeper into the prevailing scientific evidence, established facts and generally accepted paradigms concerning human evolution. To understand when, where and why our ancestors’ aquatic
Francesca Mansfield
Please see our web site for a set of related papers on her talk and more information https://whattalks.com/talks.
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