• The earliest fisherpeople and their shell tools

    From littoral.homo@gmail.com@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 25 08:15:42 2023
    https://www.meghanzulian.com/blog/ypjzpu8veyrjp6s6jtwl0k6kobjsdh
    The earliest fisherpeople and their shell tools
    Meghan Zulian FoodOcean Feb 20 ?year

    As rising atmospheric CO2 warms & acidifies the oceans, in many places shellfish will struggle to survive.
    Though many of us are not dependent on these critters in the modern day, it’s worth asking the question:
    how long have humans & our predecessors relied on shellfish?

    A study by researcher Dr Paola Villa cs found :
    in Italy, H.neand. were not only eating shellfish 100 ka, they were using shells as agricultural tools.
    Of the 171 modified shells examined from an archaeological cave site, most were reconfigured to be used as “scrapers” or “flakes”.
    Based on the state of the shells & the marine spp found on them, researchers believe:
    nearly 25% of the shells were collected live by the Neanderthals from the sea-floor.
    The researchers point out the mutually exclusive occurrence of stone & shell tools suggest: when stones were scarce, H.neand. turned to shells.

    These findings suggest:
    H.neand. were swimming in coastal waters, and collecting resources long before H.sapiens arrived.
    If H.sapiens are so advanced, then why do we not see the trends of them using shellfish for tools at this time?
    A study from Verhaegen & Munro suggest: the specialized ear-bones & heavier skeletons of H.neand. made them more efficient swimmers.
    Their conclusions agree with other studies:
    H.neand. were eating shellfish long before H.sapiens, in some cases as many as 150 ka (Cortés-Sánchez cs 2011).

    Fig. Stone_tools_archaeology.PNG
    Fragments of retouched shells. All are covered in tunnels from small marine organisms, some with the organisms still attached.
    Their presence indicates that these shells were collected from the deep.

    Refs
    - Neanderthals went underwater for their tools. Science Daily Press Release, Jan.15, 2020.
    - Cortés-Sánchez M., Morales-Muñiz A., Simón-Vallejo M.D., Lozano-Francisco M.C., Vera-Peláez J. L., Finlayson C., Rodríguez-Vidal J., Delgado-Huertas A., Jiménez-Espejo F. J., Martínez-Ruiz F., Martínez-Aguirre M.A., Pascual-Granged A.J.,
    Bergadà-Zapata M.M., Gibaja-Bao J.F., Riquelme-Cantal J.A., López-Sáez J.A., Rodrigo-Gámiz M., Sakai S., Sugisaki S. … Bicho N.F. 2011
    Earliest Known Use of Marine Resources by Neanderthals. PLOS ONE, 6(9), e24026 doi org/10.1371/journal.pone.0024026
    - Paola Villa, Sylvain Soriano, Luca Pollarolo, Carlo Smriglio, Mario Gaeta, Massimo D’Orazio, Jacopo Conforti, Carlo Tozzi. Neandertals on the beach: Use of marine resources at Grotta dei Moscerini (Latium, Italy). PLOS ONE, 2020; 15 (1): e0226690
    - Verhaegen M. & Munro S. Pachyosteosclerosis Suggests Archaic Homo Frequently Collected Sessile Littoral Foods. HOMO 2011; 62:237–247

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  • From JTEM is so reasonable@21:1/5 to littor...@gmail.com on Thu Oct 26 20:35:12 2023
    littor...@gmail.com wrote:

    As rising atmospheric CO2 warms & acidifies the oceans

    To prove that science is dead:

    NASA insists that CO2 stays in the atmosphere for a minimum of
    300 years -- 300 to 1000 years -- which means pretty much ZERO
    CO2 produced in the entirely of the Industrial Revolution has ever
    left the atmosphere... AND at the same time it's turning the oceans
    into acid even though it's not.

    https://climate.nasa.gov/news/2915/the-atmosphere-getting-a-handle-on-carbon-dioxide/

    You can buy a simple PH test off of Amazon, or maybe in a nearby
    shop, and go test the PH level of the sea all by yourself. It's not
    acidic.

    And, like I said, according to the propaganda -- what were are
    ordered to believe is science -- none of it has left the atmosphere
    anyway. Not yet.

    how long have humans & our predecessors relied on shellfish?

    I imagine it's been MILLIONS

    More than 8 million. Probably 10 or possibly 20. It depends on how
    you define our predecessors and what model you support for things
    like bipedalism.

    I do kind of favor your island ideas. Insular Dwarfism is well known.
    What isn't well known is Insular Gigantism. Google it, you'll find
    sources claiming that it commonly precedes Dwarfism.

    The idea I love is that plate tectonics and/or climate fluctuations
    stranded one or more population on an island without predators.
    Competing only against each other, this led to gigantism. But instead
    of exhausting resources & spawning dwarfism, they exploited the
    sea -- shellfish in particular -- and fueled even more growth.

    "High protein diet," and all that.

    A study by researcher Dr Paola Villa cs found :
    in Italy, H.neand. were not only eating shellfish 100 ka, they were
    using shells as agricultural tools.

    Oh, that's *Way* too recent to be significant!

    https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna56552639

    No, sorry, you were right all along...

    NOTE: The above link is consistent not only with Aquatic Ape but
    with populations pushing inland. That's the model. They followed
    the coast and then for any number of reasons followed freshwater
    outlets or transitional wetlands inland, eventually adapting to their
    new environments. This resulted in permanent, unique populations
    across Eurasia and deep into Africa.

    ...of course none of this is supported by the good Doctor but
    nobody is perfect.




    -- --

    https://jtem.tumblr.com/post/731796353021247489

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  • From Marc Verhaegen@21:1/5 to All on Fri Oct 27 15:28:14 2023
    Op vrijdag 27 oktober 2023 om 05:35:13 UTC+2 schreef JTEM is so reasonable:
    littor...@gmail.com wrote:

    As rising atmospheric CO2 warms & acidifies the oceans

    To prove that science is dead:
    NASA insists that CO2 stays in the atmosphere for a minimum of
    300 years -- 300 to 1000 years -- which means pretty much ZERO
    CO2 produced in the entirely of the Industrial Revolution has ever
    left the atmosphere... AND at the same time it's turning the oceans
    into acid even though it's not. https://climate.nasa.gov/news/2915/the-atmosphere-getting-a-handle-on-carbon-dioxide/
    You can buy a simple pH-test off of Amazon, or maybe in a nearby
    shop, and go test the pH level of the sea all by yourself. It's not acidic. And, like I said, according to the propaganda -- what were are
    ordered to believe is science -- none of it has left the atmosphere
    anyway. Not yet.

    how long have humans & our predecessors relied on shellfish?

    I imagine it's been MILLIONS
    More than 8 million. Probably 10 or possibly 20. It depends on how
    you define our predecessors and what model you support for things
    like bipedalism.

    No doubt Miocene Hominoidea c 25 Ma were already "BP":
    wading+climbing vertically in swamp forests, google "aquarboreal",
    they might have (occasionally?) included mangrove oysters into their diet?
    But they weren't yet molluscivores IMO:
    systematic/frequent shellfish-diving (only Homo?) was only early-Pleistocene?

    1) Hylobatids after 25-10 Ma followed the N-Tethys Ocean coastal forests -> East -> SE.Asia.
    2) Pongids after c 15 Ma followed, forced hylobatids higher into the trees: brachiating?
    3) Pliocene Homo (after c 5 Ma) followed: was forced by pongids deeper into the sea: shellfish-diving??

    I do kind of favor your island ideas. Insular Dwarfism is well known.
    What isn't well known is Insular Gigantism. Google it, you'll find
    sources claiming that it commonly precedes Dwarfism.
    The idea I love is that plate tectonics and/or climate fluctuations
    stranded one or more population on an island without predators.
    Competing only against each other, this led to gigantism. But instead
    of exhausting resources & spawning dwarfism, they exploited the
    sea -- shellfish in particular -- and fueled even more growth.
    "High protein diet," and all that.

    A study by researcher Dr Paola Villa cs found :
    in Italy, H.neand. were not only eating shellfish 100 ka, they were
    using shells as agricultural tools.

    Oh, that's *Way* too recent to be significant! https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna56552639
    No, sorry, you were right all along...
    NOTE: The above link is consistent not only with Aquatic Ape but
    with populations pushing inland. That's the model. They followed
    the coast and then for any number of reasons followed freshwater
    outlets or transitional wetlands inland, eventually adapting to their
    new environments. This resulted in permanent, unique populations
    across Eurasia and deep into Africa.
    ...of course none of this is supported by the good Doctor but
    nobody is perfect.

    :-)
    Nice to see there are still a few intelligent people here...
    One must be incredibly stupid to believe one's ancestors ran after savanna antelopes. :-D

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