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Author: Lee OlsenLee Olsen Date: Apr 21, 2008 14:12
On Apr 21, 11:58Â am, Marc Verhaegen wrote:
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Author: Marc VerhaegenMarc Verhaegen Date: Apr 21, 2008 14:43
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Author: Lee OlsenLee Olsen Date: Apr 21, 2008 16:11
On Apr 21, 2:43Â pm, Marc Verhaegen wrote:
"Here's a point to consider when evaluating AAT. I did not learn this
point from some academic overlord with an anti-AAT agenda; I learned
it while trying to avoid becoming crocodile food in Africa. When I
spent several months with a team at Lake Turkana, Kenya, investigating
some of the most important early hominid sites in the world, one of
our overriding concerns -- while swimming, bathing, or catching fish
with a net -- was to watch out for crocodiles in the shallows. A croc
can be on you, crush your legs in its jaws, and drag you under to
drown before you have time to screech for help.
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Author: Day BrownDay Brown Date: Apr 21, 2008 17:53
On Apr 21, 6:11 pm, Lee Olsen hotmail.com> wrote:
> "Here's a point to consider when evaluating AAT. I did not learn this
> point from some academic overlord with an anti-AAT agenda; I learned
> it while trying to avoid becoming crocodile food in Africa. When I
> spent several months with a team at Lake Turkana, Kenya, investigating
> some of the most important early hominid sites in the world, one of
> our overriding concerns -- while swimming, bathing, or catching fish
> with a net -- was to watch out for crocodiles in the shallows. A croc
> can be on you, crush your legs in its jaws, and drag you under to
> drown before you have time to screech for help.
>
> The fact that crocodiles co-existed in time and space with early
> hominids is a colossal blow to AAT, which does not explain what
> advantages early humans would have gained by spending time in
> crocodile-populated waters; an environment where they could not make
> fires, throw stones or sticks, use other tools, or have any hope
> whatever of escaping the most common predator. A troop of early
> hominids wading in a lakeshore or swampy forest would best be
> described as a crocodile banquet. The cute, feel-good images of babies
> swimming freely in a pool, shown in the AAT video, have nothing to do ...
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Author: Lee OlsenLee Olsen Date: Apr 21, 2008 18:27
On Apr 21, 5:53Â pm, Day Brown hughes.net> wrote:
> On Apr 21, 6:11 pm, Lee Olsen hotmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>
>> "Here's a point to consider when evaluating AAT. I did not learn this
>> point from some academic overlord with an anti-AAT agenda; I learned
>> it while trying to avoid becoming crocodile food in Africa. When I
>> spent several months with a team at Lake Turkana, Kenya, investigating
>> some of the most important early hominid sites in the world, one of
>> our overriding concerns -- while swimming, bathing, or catching fish
>> with a net -- was to watch out for crocodiles in the shallows. A croc
>> can be on you, crush your legs in its jaws, and drag you under to
>> drown before you have time to screech for help.
>
>> The fact that crocodiles co-existed in time and space with early
>> hominids is a colossal blow to AAT, which does not explain what
>> advantages early humans would have gained by spending time in
>> crocodile-populated waters; an environment where they could not make
>> fires, throw stones or sticks, use other tools, or have any hope ...
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Author: Marc VerhaegenMarc Verhaegen Date: Apr 22, 2008 12:35
>> "Here's a point to consider when evaluating AAT. I did not learn this
>> point from some academic overlord with an anti-AAT agenda; I learned
>> it while trying to avoid becoming crocodile food in Africa...
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Author: Lee OlsenLee Olsen Date: Apr 22, 2008 13:05
On Apr 22, 12:35Â pm, Marc Verhaegen wrote:
>
> :-D
> This "predator avoidance" blabla has nothing to do with AAT.
Nothing has anything to do with AAT, because never existed.
FYI:
Message-ID: <1124421294.671438.286120@ z14g2000cwz.googlegroups.com>
Jason Eshleman: "You, Marc, are a low-life, a real sleazebag
sociopath. If it makes you feel
better to repeat ad nauseum that no one has an argument against your
scenario, you really ought to get your medication adjusted. It might
actually make you less of a dickhead.
You are asking for someone to contradict something
that you've not made a case for. You are asking someone to prove a
negative. This isn't science, though I suspect you don't know what
science is and as such will continue your mentally ill diatribes."
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Author: CjCj Date: Apr 22, 2008 13:44
"Marc Verhaegen" wrote in message
news:C4340A8C.1193F%%m_verhaegen@skynet.be...
>>> "Here's a point to consider when evaluating AAT. I did not learn this
>>> point from some academic overlord with an anti-AAT agenda; I learned
>>> it while trying to avoid becoming crocodile food in Africa. When I
>>> spent several months with a team at Lake Turkana, Kenya, investigating
>>> some of the most important early hominid sites in the world, one of
>>> our overriding concerns -- while swimming, bathing, or catching fish
>>> with a net -- was to watch out for crocodiles in the shallows. A croc
>>> can be on you, crush your legs in its jaws, and drag you under to
>>> drown before you have time to screech for help.
>>> The fact that crocodiles co-existed in time and space with early
>>> hominids is a colossal blow to AAT, which does not explain what
>>> advantages early humans would have gained by spending time in
>>> crocodile-populated waters; an environment where they could not make ...
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Author: Marc VerhaegenMarc Verhaegen Date: Apr 22, 2008 14:29
My little boy, for endless repetitions you have to be with your buddy Olson.
Op 22-04-2008 22:44, in artikel p7adnWb7osfZ05PVnZ2dnUVZ_vSdnZ2d@ gwi.net, Cj
mist.net> schreef:
> "Marc Verhaegen" wrote in message
> news:C4340A8C.1193F%%m_verhaegen@skynet.be...
>> Op 22-04-2008 02:53, in artikel
>> b543e34d-ee37-463a-8875-8963f7420523@m44g2000hsc.googlegroups...
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Author: Lee OlsenLee Olsen Date: Apr 22, 2008 14:39
On Apr 22, 2:29Â pm, Marc Verhaegen wrote:
> My little boy,
I see you are still obsessed with chasing little boys where there
aren't any.
Get some help, pervert.
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