"Once upon a time, there was a cave. And there were cavemen: three kinds. Let’s call them Denisovans, Neanderthals, and modern humans. This cave, they felt, was such a hot property, they decided to share it. And so they did – for 300,000 years.
Neanderthals and Denisovans might have lived side by side for tens of thousands of years, scientists report in two papers in Nature.
The long-awaited studies are based on the analysis of bones, artefacts and sediments from Denisova Cave in southern Siberia, which is dotted with ancient-human remains. They provide the first detailed history of the site’s 300,000-year occupation by different groups of ancient humans.
Recorded human history only goes back about 3,500 years. Withartifacts, we could stretch it more.
Let’s grant evolutionists 10,000 years for known history we can discern from human activity, discounting the long ages that depend on Darwinian assumptions. This is the human history we see in writing and in buildings. In that period of time, humans went from huts to the moon.
Q: Can anyone possibly believe that fully-capable human beings like us, and their descendants, would stay in the same cave for 300,000 years?"
CEH