The constantly-revised story of evolution has been falsified so many times, one would think Darwinists would quit and take up truck driving. Michael Marshall should, too, after publishing his latest piece in New Scientist, “The other cradle of humanity: How Arabia shaped human evolution.” In a real sense, he is an accomplice to the paleoanthropologists’ sins by perennially giving them cover.
For review: here is the old story. Marshall retells it before dismantling it:
For decades, Africa has been seen as the cradle of humanity. The oldest known hominins arose there around 7 million
years ago and stayed on the continent for a long time, evolving into various forms including those that gave us famous fossils such as Ardi and Lucy. While some groups started to wander further afield from about 2 million years ago, Africa remained central to our story. The earliest known remains of our species, Homo sapiens, also known as modern humans, are from Africa. There we emerged around 300,000 years ago, and there we pretty much remained until around 60,000 years ago, when a single out-of-Africa migration carried modern humans all around the world – or so anthropologists thought.
You can forget all that, because it’s wrong. “We had a very straightforward scenario,” says one Darwin bigot from Max Planck.
Did you catch it? Mike just shamelessly repeated the standard Darwin miracle words: hominins “arose” — they “evolved”— we “emerged.” And for ungodly periods of time—multiple times all recorded history—they just stuck around doing nothing but making the same old stone tools, even though evolutionists admit they had brains as large or larger than ours, the ability to use fire, and were built for mobility and cooperation. If that were true, these people had incredible amounts of time to think about inventing conveniences like wheels and learning to ride a horse, but they did not until a few thousand years ago.