Whoso sheddeth man's blood, by man shall his blood be shed:
for in the image of God made he man.
Genesis 9:6
"Look at the pictures in Live Science’s article, “
They look like they could have been made yesterday, if it weren’t for the fact that they were made in a place paleoanthropologists claim is long before modern humans walked the earth. Does this make any sense? Megan Gannon writes,
In 2009, paleontologists discovered human-like footprints near the eastern shores of Lake Turkana in Ileret, Kenya. The fossilized tracks suggested similarities to modern human feet, including an arch, a rounded heel and a big toe aligned parallel with the other toes. But at 1.5 million years old, these prints were much too old to belong to Homo sapiens, or modern humans. They were attributed to Homo erectus, an early human ancestor.
Now, researchers think they know why there were so many similarities: Homo erectus may have walked like we do today.
Walking like a man takes a big brain, because upright walking involves the whole body, not just the feet. If the evolutionary story is to be believed, one has to postulate that creatures with modern human feet walked the earth for nearly