• How did humans eat meat

    From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to All on Tue Jan 9 10:37:05 2024
    It happened at night, when apes that are living on trees are asleep.
    Humans would take torches, find one tree with ape on it, and burn it.
    Imagine nazi torchlight parades, Ku Klux Klan, or burning of witches
    during Inquisition.

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  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to Marc Verhaegen on Tue Jan 9 15:42:09 2024
    On 9.1.2024. 11:19, Marc Verhaegen wrote:
    Op dinsdag 9 januari 2024 om 10:37:07 UTC+1 schreef Mario Petrinovic:
    It happened at night, when apes that are living on trees are asleep.
    Humans would take torches, find one tree with ape on it, and burn it.
    Imagine nazi torchlight parades, Ku Klux Klan, or burning of witches
    during Inquisition.

    :-D
    Yes, we were no carnivores, but rather frugi->mollusci->omnivores https://www.gondwanatalks.com/l/the-waterside-hypothesis-wading-led-to-upright-walking-in-early-humans/

    Who were, finally, able to use fire for their benefit. Starting 15 mya.

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  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to Marc Verhaegen on Tue Jan 9 17:21:37 2024
    On 9.1.2024. 16:10, Marc Verhaegen wrote:
    Op dinsdag 9 januari 2024 om 15:42:11 UTC+1 schreef Mario Petrinovic:
    On 9.1.2024. 11:19, Marc Verhaegen wrote:
    Op dinsdag 9 januari 2024 om 10:37:07 UTC+1 schreef Mario Petrinovic:
    It happened at night, when apes that are living on trees are asleep.
    Humans would take torches, find one tree with ape on it, and burn it.
    Imagine nazi torchlight parades, Ku Klux Klan, or burning of witches
    during Inquisition.

    :-D Yes, we were no carnivores, but rather frugi->mollusci->omnivores
    https://www.gondwanatalks.com/l/the-waterside-hypothesis-wading-led-to-upright-walking-in-early-humans/

    Who were, finally, able to use fire for their benefit. Starting 15 mya.

    15 Ma??? 1.5 Ma you mean?

    No. Those things change Earth vegetation, hence this changes Earth's
    albedo (because thick vegetation swallows more sunlight), so it reflects
    in surface temperature change. Nice example is when humans started to
    burn America, and this caused Younger Dryas. We had Middle Miocene
    Disruption around 14 Mya.

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  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to littor...@gmail.com on Tue Jan 9 19:12:17 2024
    On 9.1.2024. 17:54, littor...@gmail.com wrote:
    Op dinsdag 9 januari 2024 om 17:21:38 UTC+1 schreef Mario Petrinovic:
    On 9.1.2024. 16:10, Marc Verhaegen wrote:

    It happened at night, when apes that are living on trees are asleep. >>>>>> Humans would take torches, find one tree with ape on it, and burn it. >>>>>> Imagine nazi torchlight parades, Ku Klux Klan, or burning of witches >>>>>> during Inquisition.

    :-D Yes, we were no carnivores, but rather frugi->mollusci->omnivores >>>>> https://www.gondwanatalks.com/l/the-waterside-hypothesis-wading-led-to-upright-walking-in-early-humans/

    Who were, finally, able to use fire for their benefit. Starting 15 mya.

    15 Ma??? 1.5 Ma you mean?

    No. Those things change Earth vegetation, hence this changes Earth's
    albedo (because thick vegetation swallows more sunlight), so it reflects
    in surface temperature change. Nice example is when humans started to
    burn America, and this caused Younger Dryas. We had Middle Miocene
    Disruption around 14 Mya.

    ??
    - Homo & Pan split 6-5 Ma.
    - Fire use <- stone use = opening shells = early-Pleist.?

    You repeat the same old nonsense over and over again. We have bipedal
    ape 11.6 Ma. Now, you may not agree that this is our ancestor, but for
    sure you cannot deny that whoever says that this is our ancestor has a
    mighty good argument for it. In fact, much better argument than you will
    ever have. So, your nonsense of 6-5 Ma split isn't a counter-argument
    for what I am saying.
    With fire use you repeat the same. How you came up with early-Pleistocene date? They do have some Pleistocene evidence for the controlled use of fire. But I am talking about uncontrolled use of fire.
    There is no sense to start with the controlled use of fire (just like
    with absolutely anything else), a controlled developed use must be
    preceded by long term association with the substance.
    So, for example, you have stone tools. It doesn't fall from the skies,
    it has to be preceded by long term association with stones. You get this
    on rocky coast, and nowhere else. It doesn't happen that some animal
    starts to use stones just like that, out of nothing.
    Of course, to whomever I am talking about this, he simply doesn't
    understand what I am talking about. So, my talking is pure waste of
    time, because so many people would just like that association humans
    with stones happens just immediately before the evidence of stone tools.
    The only problem is, that this doesn't work that way.
    Or, for example, we have so many plants domesticated in Americas. I
    mean, if somebody managed to domesticate so many plants in the new
    environment, out of absolutely nothing, he should have thorough
    understanding of agriculture before he came to this environment. But I
    can talk about this over and over again, for years and years, and still
    nobody will get it, for them it is perfectly alright that some species
    suddenly develops all this agriculture out of nothing. Of course,
    because to so many people it is perfectly alright that God created the
    world in seven days out of nothing, and a lot of people see nothing
    wrong with such an idea. So what can I do.

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  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to Mario Petrinovic on Tue Jan 9 19:24:24 2024
    On 9.1.2024. 19:12, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 9.1.2024. 17:54, littor...@gmail.com wrote:
    Op dinsdag 9 januari 2024 om 17:21:38 UTC+1 schreef Mario Petrinovic:
    On 9.1.2024. 16:10, Marc Verhaegen wrote:

    It happened at night, when apes that are living on trees are asleep. >>>>>>> Humans would take torches, find one tree with ape on it, and burn >>>>>>> it.
    Imagine nazi torchlight parades, Ku Klux Klan, or burning of witches >>>>>>> during Inquisition.

    :-D Yes, we were no carnivores, but rather frugi->mollusci->omnivores >>>>>> https://www.gondwanatalks.com/l/the-waterside-hypothesis-wading-led-to-upright-walking-in-early-humans/

    Who were, finally, able to use fire for their benefit. Starting 15
    mya.

    15 Ma??? 1.5 Ma you mean?

    No. Those things change Earth vegetation, hence this changes Earth's
    albedo (because thick vegetation swallows more sunlight), so it reflects >>> in surface temperature change. Nice example is when humans started to
    burn America, and this caused Younger Dryas. We had Middle Miocene
    Disruption around 14 Mya.

    ??
    - Homo & Pan split 6-5 Ma.
    - Fire use <- stone use = opening shells = early-Pleist.?

            You repeat the same old nonsense over and over again. We have bipedal ape 11.6 Ma. Now, you may not agree that this is our ancestor,
    but for sure you cannot deny that whoever says that this is our ancestor
    has a mighty good argument for it. In fact, much better argument than
    you will ever have. So, your nonsense of 6-5 Ma split isn't a counter-argument for what I am saying.
            With fire use you repeat the same. How you came up with early-Pleistocene date? They do have some Pleistocene evidence for the controlled use of fire. But I am talking about uncontrolled use of fire. There is no sense to start with the controlled use of fire (just like
    with absolutely anything else), a controlled developed use must be
    preceded by long term association with the substance.
            So, for example, you have stone tools. It doesn't fall from the
    skies, it has to be preceded by long term association with stones. You
    get this on rocky coast, and nowhere else. It doesn't happen that some
    animal starts to use stones just like that, out of nothing.
            Of course, to whomever I am talking about this, he simply doesn't understand what I am talking about. So, my talking is pure waste
    of time, because so many people would just like that association humans
    with stones happens just immediately before the evidence of stone tools.
    The only problem is, that this doesn't work that way.
            Or, for example, we have so many plants domesticated in Americas. I mean, if somebody managed to domesticate so many plants in
    the new environment, out of absolutely nothing, he should have thorough understanding of agriculture before he came to this environment. But I
    can talk about this over and over again, for years and years, and still nobody will get it, for them it is perfectly alright that some species suddenly develops all this agriculture out of nothing. Of course,
    because to so many people it is perfectly alright that God created the
    world in seven days out of nothing, and a lot of people see nothing
    wrong with such an idea. So what can I do.

    Oh yes, those people who are claiming that we suddenly started to use
    fire, that we suddenly started to use stones, that we suddenly started
    to use agriculture out of absolutely nothing, have the perfect argument
    for how this is possible. It is because we are divine, you know. And
    then you see them in their graduation cloaks, looking so divine, and you realize that being a divine is an argument you will never able to counter.

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  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to JTEM is so reasonable on Thu Jan 11 14:42:00 2024
    On 11.1.2024. 14:00, JTEM is so reasonable wrote:
    Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    It happened at night, when apes that are living on trees are asleep.
    Humans would take torches, find one tree with ape on it, and burn it.
    Imagine nazi torchlight parades, Ku Klux Klan, or burning of witches
    during Inquisition.

    Nonsense. They just used their machineguns.

    Apes didn't live in trees, btw. They were driven to the trees. There
    were plenty of apes -- or their parent species -- running around on
    the ground. They were wiped out by Homo. The only survivors were
    the ones in trees... also caves, at first.

    Yes, the only survivors live on trees, hence apes lived on trees. And
    only in rain forest, where there is too big precipitation so that you
    cannot burn around. But in the whole planet was forested, and apes lived
    on those trees, where there wasn't such a big precipitation. Those were
    eaten by humans.
    Anyway, I don't think that you are smart enough to figure this out.
    You are just bubbling without any sense.

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  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to Marc Verhaegen on Thu Jan 11 18:56:06 2024
    On 11.1.2024. 17:32, Marc Verhaegen wrote:
    Op donderdag 11 januari 2024 om 14:42:02 UTC+1 schreef Mario Petrinovic: Nothing of interest.
    I don't think that you are smart enough to figure this out, Mario Petrinovic. You are just bubbling without any sense.

    Of course (that you don't think...), :) .

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  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to JTEM is so reasonable on Fri Jan 12 22:38:00 2024
    On 12.1.2024. 20:45, JTEM is so reasonable wrote:
    Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    Yes, the only survivors live on trees, hence apes lived on trees.

    Chimps descend from an upright walker. They ADAPTED TO the
    trees. Their hands were more like ours. We have the more primitive
    form of hand than present chimps. We are the less derived. Their
    ancestors did not live in trees.

    Please stop picking your nose long enough to think about these
    things BEFORE you post.

    God bless. Me.

    Absolutely, the ancestors of apes didn't live on trees, they were like
    us. Well, we are still like us, but apes moved to trees, this is why
    they went extinct, except the extant ones, which are living in areas
    with huge precipitation. So, all the apes which weren't living in areas
    with huge precipitation got extinct because precipitation couldn't save
    them. It is obvious that precipitation (i.e., water) saves apes.
    Can I continue to pick my nose, or you have more questions?
    BTW, I thought that you are the God.

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  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to Mario Petrinovic on Fri Jan 12 22:47:54 2024
    On 12.1.2024. 22:38, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 12.1.2024. 20:45, JTEM is so reasonable wrote:
    Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    Yes, the only survivors live on trees, hence apes lived on trees.

    Chimps descend from an upright walker. They ADAPTED TO the
    trees. Their hands were more like ours. We have the more primitive
    form of hand than present chimps. We are the less derived. Their
    ancestors did not live in trees.

    Please stop picking your nose long enough to think about these
    things BEFORE you post.

    God bless. Me.

            Absolutely, the ancestors of apes didn't live on trees, they were like us. Well, we are still like us, but apes moved to trees, this
    is why they went extinct, except the extant ones, which are living in
    areas with huge precipitation. So, all the apes which weren't living in
    areas with huge precipitation got extinct because precipitation couldn't
    save them. It is obvious that precipitation (i.e., water) saves apes.
            Can I continue to pick my nose, or you have more questions?
            BTW, I thought that you are the God.

    And, BTW, Miocene apes went extinct at the exact time when deforestation emerged. Also, Oreopithecus didn't go extinct for a while,
    but the island where Oreopithecus lived (Tusco-Sardinian island) didn't experience deforestation. And finally, when this island touched mainland
    it experienced deforestation, and Oreopithecus went extinct. Ah, too
    many coincidences to handle, isn't it? Wherever there is deforestation
    apes go extinct, only where forest remained, apes don't go extinct. I
    mean, do I really need to draw a picture for you, like for a little child?

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  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to Mario Petrinovic on Fri Jan 12 22:52:46 2024
    On 12.1.2024. 22:47, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 12.1.2024. 22:38, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 12.1.2024. 20:45, JTEM is so reasonable wrote:
    Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    Yes, the only survivors live on trees, hence apes lived on trees.

    Chimps descend from an upright walker. They ADAPTED TO the
    trees. Their hands were more like ours. We have the more primitive
    form of hand than present chimps. We are the less derived. Their
    ancestors did not live in trees.

    Please stop picking your nose long enough to think about these
    things BEFORE you post.

    God bless. Me.

             Absolutely, the ancestors of apes didn't live on trees, they
    were like us. Well, we are still like us, but apes moved to trees,
    this is why they went extinct, except the extant ones, which are
    living in areas with huge precipitation. So, all the apes which
    weren't living in areas with huge precipitation got extinct because
    precipitation couldn't save them. It is obvious that precipitation
    (i.e., water) saves apes.
             Can I continue to pick my nose, or you have more questions? >>          BTW, I thought that you are the God.

            And, BTW, Miocene apes went extinct at the exact time when deforestation emerged. Also, Oreopithecus didn't go extinct for a while,
    but the island where Oreopithecus lived (Tusco-Sardinian island) didn't experience deforestation. And finally, when this island touched mainland
    it experienced deforestation, and Oreopithecus went extinct. Ah, too
    many coincidences to handle, isn't it? Wherever there is deforestation
    apes go extinct, only where forest remained, apes don't go extinct. I
    mean, do I really need to draw a picture for you, like for a little child?

    And BTW (and then I have to continue to pick my nose after that), you
    have not the slightest idea about what happened in the past, because you
    simply never even tried to find out. You are just bubbling around
    without any knowledge of the past at all. I don't think that you know
    what Oreopithecus is, I don't think that you ever heard about
    Tusco-Sardinian island, you have never ever shown that you have *any*
    knowledge about paleoanthropology, even the basic knowledge. I wonder if
    you have knowledge about Bible, if you don't have it about
    paleoanthropology.

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