Homo_naledi_foot 2 Type post Author Casey Luskin Date October 27, 2022 CategoriesHuman Origins and AnthropologyPaleontology Tagged , Australopithecines, Australopithecus sediba, Bernard Wood, burial, Carol Ward, chronology, CNN, Daily Mail, Daniel Lieberman, fossil record, Fossils and Human Evolution (series), George Washington University, hominins, Homo erectus, Homo naledi, human origins, humans, Ian Tattersall, Mark Collard, morphology, mosaic, Sigrid Hartwig-Scherer, South Africa, University of Missouri The Human Fossil Record Lacks Intermediaries Casey Luskin October 27, 2022 Human Origins and Anthropology, Paleontology 14 The news media might be heavily biased toward evolution, but at least it is predictable. Read More ›
Homo heidelbergensis Type post Author Casey Luskin Date November 12, 2021 CategoriesFaith & ScienceHuman Origins and AnthropologyPaleontology Tagged , Adam and Eve, Aeon, Annual Review of Anthropology, Bernard Wood, brain size, chimpanzees, Denisovans, DNA, Donald Johanson, evolution, Homo erectus, Homo heidelbergensis, Homo sapiens, human origins, In Quest of the Historical Adam, In Quest of the Historical Adam (series), Lucy, Mark Collard, Middle Pleistocene, most recent common ancestor, Neanderthals, pseudogenes, Review of Craig's In Quest of the Historical Adam (series), S. Joshua Swamidass, Science (journal), total energy expenditure, William Lane Craig Traditional or Not? Assessing William Lane Craig’s Model on Adam and Eve Casey Luskin November 12, 2021 Faith & Science, Human Origins and Anthropology, Paleontology 25 I’m having trouble making sense of exactly what his model holds. And it seems I’m not alone. Read More ›