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Homo luzonensis

Posted: Thu Apr 11, 2019 5:07 pm
by Bÿrn Jaoél
NEW HOMO SPECIES DISCOVERED IN S.E ASIA!!!!!

Meet Homo luzonensis. Another diminutive homonin suggested to be even smaller and more gracile than H. floresiensis, found in the Philipines, an island group which was never connected to the Sunda land mass.
Big implications...

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/scie ... uzonensis/

Re: Homo luzonensis

Posted: Fri Apr 12, 2019 8:14 am
by rowbe
...and the find is believed to be only 50 000 to 67 000 years old. Luzon has thought not to have any land bridge in the past. As stated "BIG IMPLICATIONS" especially for those that doubt our hairymen couldn't have made it to Australia due to a lack of a land bridge.
Makes you wonder what find will be released in the future.

Re: Homo luzonensis

Posted: Fri Apr 12, 2019 10:05 am
by Searcher
The land bridge theory from the top end is interesting. Just how recent could it have been?

Tasmania was connected to the mainland up until around 12,000 years ago when melting ice caused sea levels to rise.

Re: Homo luzonensis

Posted: Fri Apr 12, 2019 10:08 am
by yowiedan
Makes you think how many Humanoid type creatures have lived on this planet????

Re: Homo luzonensis

Posted: Sat Apr 13, 2019 10:03 am
by Yowie bait
I was talking to a man the other day about Aboriginal sites and customs, trees, marsupials etc and to my amazement he brought up some of these skulls we talk about on here like the kow swamp people or whatever they are.

He is a senior and an academic is all i will say and he told me about some associates of his that i think were Archeologists.

Anyway these guys kept finding skulls and bones in their work which they sent in for testing to the relevant scientific authority. Ar first they were very interested in these blokes findings but eventually were told under any circumstances not to send any more bones or skulls in for testing.

One of the hip bones they found was level with their armpits ans was estimated at least 8 ft tall which they reburied and left where they found it.

Apparently there is odd findings and burial sites all over Australia that have been completely ignored by science.

Re: Homo luzonensis

Posted: Sat Apr 13, 2019 9:27 pm
by Wolf
yowiedan wrote: Fri Apr 12, 2019 10:08 am Makes you think how many Humanoid type creatures have lived on this planet????
Yes it does... consider the canids...
...how many varieties of canids are there across the planet. Surely Homo was (is?) at least as varied... likely more so considering the evident success of just one example (the only surviving one acknowledged by 'science'... sapiens) (detective)

... and yet we are told exactly that... only one survived the ages... :lol: