Lee Berger of the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, who led the team that found the fossils in August 2008, said the team were hoping to reveal a possible two further skeletons from the same site.
He was reluctant to define the new species as a "missing link" in human evolutionary history, but said it would "contribute enormously to our understanding of what was going on at that moment where the early members of the genus Homo emerged".
SHOOT: It's part of a series of 'linkages' certainly. Creationists have the view that there is one central missing link where God touched an ape and a man started evolving. Of course we know that the evolutionary process, from birds, to mice to men, doesn't work like that, as demonstrated in the fossil record.
He was reluctant to define the new species as a "missing link" in human evolutionary history, but said it would "contribute enormously to our understanding of what was going on at that moment where the early members of the genus Homo emerged".
SHOOT: It's part of a series of 'linkages' certainly. Creationists have the view that there is one central missing link where God touched an ape and a man started evolving. Of course we know that the evolutionary process, from birds, to mice to men, doesn't work like that, as demonstrated in the fossil record.
clipped from www.news24.com
|
No comments:
Post a Comment