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Tuesday, May 25, 2010

19 yrs after Klevius Demand for Resources - on the right to be poor, Spencer Wells agrees!

Spencer Wells, the genetist who helped pointing out that modern Europeans didn't arrive via Mideast but from Siberia where they emerged together with mongoloid Asians, has now written a new book where he basically repeats Klevius criticism of civilizations in Demand for Resources - on the right to be poor (1992). The original idea is from 1980, and first published in a brief article 1981 after some discussions with the Finnish philosopher Georg Henrik von Wright (Ludwig Wittgenstein's possibly best friend).


The map is from Well's The Journey of Man, and further developed by Klevius. It definitely proves that what we may arguably consider as humans did not develop in Africa. What came out of Africa was a small Chimp/Homo hybrid which ought not to be confused with more human-like Homos already in existence both in Eurasia and Africa (these Homos later became mixed with the down-moving modern "Aurignacian" humans from the North).




















This is Denisova in Siberia where the mtDNA of a finger of a 40,000 year non-human reveals hybridization with Neanderthals and relationship with Melanesians (Floresiensis, the apeman who, with a tiny brain, was equally intelligent as Homo erectus with more than double the brain, was from the same place). Note that this finger both in time and place fits eerily well in Klevius' theory.





This extremely complicated to manufacture stone bracelet was made in Siberia 40,000 years ago by utilizing a drilling technology, comparable to modern machines, according to the researchers who found it. It was found nearby by the non-human Denisovan.