Repeatedly the skull shape attributed to Bigfoot has been large, prominent brow, powerful jaw, and pointed head. This odd skull above from the Humboldt Sink didn’t belong to any known Amerindians was not only ancient, but showed another race of man here on the continent long ago. Victoria, Texas - land of the extinct tribe of Karankawa What we have to wonder is where do today's Bigfoot stand in this lineup of man in both "archaic" and "modern" forms, as well as races within each branch? Do we share ancestors? Do we share genes? Is there any chance we ever mated in the past and produced offspring? For instance, Neanderthal genes likely helped our coloring to handle less sunlight by developing more vitamin D when we did encounter sunlight and Denisovans made it possible for today's Sherpa to live at high elevations and tolerate it readily, as well as cold tolerance for the Inuit People. But, they also helped us make a leap from our African origins to northern climate adaptation very quickly. This introduction of other chromosomes might have helped us to be stronger in certain arenas, and more vulnerable and disease-prone in others. Only recently we discovered that today’s Homo sapiens carry DNA of Denisovans, Neanderthal and another, as of yet unnamed, archaic man. Throughout man's development to what we are today, there was interbreeding among sometimes fairly disparate relatives. This evolutionary lineup of man (above) is not really accurate.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |