"If humans came from monkeys, why are there still monkeys?"
If there is one phrase that makes me want to throw a chair across the room, it's that one. (Oh, that and, "The Big Bang means that nothing exploded and became everything.") Despite the fact that a quick read of any of a number of reputable sites about evolution would make it clear that the question is ridiculous, I still see it asked in such a way that the person evidently thinks they've scored some serious points in the debate. My usual response is, "My ancestors came from France. Why are there still French people?" But the equivalence of the two seems to go so far over their heads that it doesn't even ruffle their hair.
Of course, not all the blame lies with the creationists and their ilk. How many times have you seen, in otherwise accurate sources, human evolution depicted with an illustration like this?
The reason all this comes up is because of a new study of the "Petralona Skull," a hominin skull found covered in dripstone (calcium carbonate) in a cave near Thessaloniki, Greece. The skull has been successfully dated to somewhere between 277,000 and 539,000 years ago -- the uncertainty is because of estimates in the rate of formation of the calcite layers.
Even with the uncertainty, this range puts it outside of the realm of possibility that it's a modern human skull. Morphologically, it seems considerably more primitive than typical Neanderthal skulls, too. So it appears that there was a distinct population of hominins living in southern Europe and coexisting with early Neanderthals -- one about which paleontologists know next to nothing.
So our family tree turns out to be even more complicated than we'd realized -- and there might well be an additional branch, not in Africa (where most of the diversification in hominins occurred) but in Europe.
Among many others.
So as usual, the mischaracterization of science by anti-science types misses the reality by a mile, and worse, misses how incredibly cool that reality is. The more we find out about our own species's past, the richer it becomes.
I guess if someone wants to dismiss it all with a sneering "why are there still monkeys?", that's up to them. But me, I'd rather keep learning. And for that, I'm listening to what the scientists themselves have to say.
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