An excavation team under the leadership of Australian and Indonesian
scientists have unearthed the remains of eight human beings of rather short
stature and small brain volume in the Liang Bua cave on the Indonesian island
of Flores. The fossils were ascribed the name Homo floresiensis
(Flores Man) after the island on which they were discovered.
One skeleton, estimated to be that of a woman in her 30s and calculated
to be some 18,000 years old, was only 1 metre tall. The brain volume of the
woman in question was a mere 380 cc. That is significant since it may be regarded
as small even for a chimpanzee. Investigations into the findings, estimated
to belong to at least eight individuals, show that H. floresiensis lived
in this cave between 95,000 and 12,000 years ago. The common opinion of the
scientists who examined the tools and animal bones unearthed in the cave is
that H. floresiensis individuals exhibited complex behaviour requiring
the capacity for speech, in other words that they were social and intelligent
human beings with creative ability. Stones carved and sharpened for particular
purposes discovered in the cave, and animal bones, show that these people were
successful hunters, capable of catching animals larger than themselves.
What you have read so far are the objective facts regarding the
findings unearthed. Now let us examine the distortions perpetrated by evolutionists
in order to fit these findings to the evolution myth and see how a discovery
that actually deals a severe blow to Darwinism has been turned into a propaganda
tool by the Darwinist media.
This article responds to the evolutionist claims concerning H.
floresiensis made in the framework of the October 28, 2004, report on Ntvmsnbc.com
titled "Revolution in Anthropology: The Hobbits." In this report, Ntvmsnbc.com
announced the H. floresiensis discovery under the caption "new human-like
species unearthed," and claimed that these creatures emerged on the island of
Flores as the result of "an unforeseen process of evolution." The reasons why
these claims possess no valid scientific validity are set out below, and Ntvmsnbc.com's
blind support for Darwinism is revealed.
The "new human-like species" deception
The reason why scientists have elected to give the fossils in question
the name H. floresiensis is this: when researchers who have accepted
the idea that human beings came into being through evolution right from the
outset lay their hands on fossils belonging to old human races they name them
in such a way as to accord with the evolutionary myth they have present in their
minds. The method of doing this is based on exaggerated interpretation of the
variations (*) among old human races and between them and modern man, and thus
the declaration of the fossils as a "new species."
The H. floresiensis fossils are also a product of this method,
and their description as a new species rests solely on evolutionist preconceptions.
The fact is that the description of H. floresiensis as a
new human species provides no support at all for the theory of evolution, but
on the contrary reveals how forced the claims regarding it actually are.
1. It is impossible to gauge species boundaries by looking at bones
The concept of the biological species is used in the present day
for organisms included in the same category that are able to mate and produce
healthy offspring. This definition is based on mutual reproducibility as setting
out the boundary criterion between species. There is no means of knowing, however,
just by looking at the fossilised bones of organisms that lived in the past
which were able to reproduce with which.
Classification based on degrees of similarities between bones (in
other words the variations exhibited among these) may not reveal scientifically
definite conclusions. That is because although some species (such as the dog)
exhibit wide variation, others (such as the cheetah) are known to exhibit only
narrow variation.
Accordingly, when fossils belonging to extinct living things are
discovered the variation observed may stem from one of two reasons. This variation
either belongs to a species exhibiting wide variation or to a few separate species
exhibiting narrow variation. Yet there is no way of knowing which of the two
actually applies. Indeed, Alan Walker, a Pennsylvania State University paleoanthropologist,
and also an evolutionist, admits this fact by saying that one cannot know whether
or not a fossil is representative of the community to which it belongs. He further
states that one cannot know whether it comes from one of the ends of the species
range, or from somewhere in the middle. (i)
Richard Potts, another evolutionist and anthropologist, as well
as director of the Human Origins Program at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington,
accepts the same truth in the words: "To my mind it is very difficult to say,
just from the bones, where the species boundaries lie." (ii)
2. It is a mistake to generalise the features of a species from just
a limited number of fossils
Evolutionists define the H. floresiensis fossils as a separate
species, and regard its small brain volume and short skeleton as characteristics
of that species. The fact is, however, that individuals may not carry all the
features in the population gene pool (the collection of genes giving rise to
a species) in their bodies. To put it another way, the features exhibited by
individuals may not be those generally exhibited in the population. That being
the case, the smaller the number of fossils analysed, the greater the risk of
error in assuming that their features are those of the general population to
which they belong. Robert Locke, editor of the magazine Discovering Archaeology,
has elucidated this with a simple analogy. He said that if a paleoanthropologist
of the future discovers bones belonging to a professional basketball player,
then twenty-first century man may well seem to have been a giant species. He
further stated that if the skeleton belongs to a jockey, on the other hand,
then we will seem to have been short and puny bipeds. (iii)
In short, the definition of H. floresiensis as a separate
species based on its small brain volume and short skeleton, and the assumption
that all individuals possessed those same features, is a mistake. These fossils
may well be regarded as variations seen in old human races living at that time.
Indeed, that is the truth which emerges when the analysis performed on H.
floresiensis is not restricted to its anatomy.
H. floresiensis: An Ancient Human Race
A human being may be a dwarf, have a small brain volume, a slightly
protruding jaw or a narrow forehead. He or she may even walk leaning over with
a hunched back due to a disease of the joints. Yet those anatomical features
do not make that person a non-human species.
Modern day dwarves are living documentation of this. According
to the Guinness Records Internet site, the American Tamara de Treaux is a 77
cm (2 ft 7 in) tall cinema actor. The Filipino Weng Wang is another short actor
at 83 cm (2 ft 9 in) tall. The shortest married couple are the Brazilian Douglas
da Silva (90 cm / 35 in) and Claudia Rocha (93 cm / 36 in). (iv)
Just like these people, H. floresiensis individuals possessed
creative and linguistic capabilities, led social lives and were intelligent.
H. floresiensis is of course an important discovery in terms of showing
that human beings can actually possess such small brain volumes.
So, how is it that these people possessed such small brain volumes
and short skeletons?
In their articles published in the journal Nature, (v,
vi) the scientists who discovered H. floresiensis touch on two possibilities
with regard to the dimensions of these fossils. The first is abnormalities that
emerged as the result of a genetic mutation. One of the leading names from the
research team, paleoanthropologist Peter Brown, describes in an interview published
on the journal Scientific American website how brain volume is exceedingly
small in people exposed to such abnormalities (pituitary dwarves or microcephalic
dwarves). Brown states that no traces of such abnormality have been encountered
in the H. floresiensis anatomy, but it is also hard to disregard the
possibility (vii).
The second possibility, on which scientists have concentrated more is that H.
floresiensis may have been affected by a process known as island dwarfism.
Island dwarfism describes living things divided by geographic isolation
from the land population undergoing gradual physical shrinkage due to a local
insufficiency of food resources. This process is well known from mammal fossils
unearthed on islands. For example, it is estimated that 1 metre tall elephants
discovered on Sicily and Malta turned into dwarves in as little as 5,000 years
after being stranded on the islands and divided from 4 metre high elephants.
(viii)
This explanation is distorted on Ntvmsnbc.com and H. floresiensis is
claimed "to have undergone an unforeseen process of evolution on the island."
In fact, however, nothing about island dwarfism supports the theory of evolution.
A living thing entering into a process of dimensional shrinkage in no way acquires
any new genetic feature, and does not turn into another living thing. It merely
decreases in size within the boundaries permitted by its genetic pool. Since
no new living thing or feature based on more complex genetic information emerges
there can be no question of any "evolution" here. For instance, a mini-radio
produced by engineers is still a radio, and no progress that might enable it
to function as a television has taken place. In the same way that the mini-radio
does not evolve into a television, so H. floresiensis did not evolve
into other living forms. Therefore, Ntvmsnbc.com's claims regarding H. floresiensis
consist of groundless Darwinist propaganda.
The tools they used are evidence that H. floresiensis was
an ancient human race
According to the dwarfism scenario, it is assumed that the H.
floresiensis line descended from Homo erectus. The justification
for that belief is as follows: In 1998, M.J. Morwood, one of the researchers
who discovered H. floresiensis, reported that they had unearthed stone
tools dating back some 800,000 years in previous digs on the island. (ix)
Not only do these tools resemble those made by H. erectus, but H. floresiensis'
facial anatomy also generally resembles that of H. erectus. (x)
In addition, the East Asia region in which the island lies is one of the regions
where H. erectus existed for a long period. One article published in Science
journal in 1996 listed evidence that H. erectus had survived on Java, an Indonesian
island like Flores, until as recently as 27,000 years ago. (xi)
All this shows that H. floresiensis is a variation of H.
erectus and that both may have existed side by side for tens of thousands
of years. (Although described as a separate species from modern man by evolutionists,
H. erectus is actually an ancient human race. For further details click
HERE and HERE.)
National Geographic's
Evolution Deception
Right; H. floresiensis skull.
Left; Darwinist "motifs" added to the skull by National Geographic.
Close inspection reveals that organs such as lips, nose and
ears, which cannot be determined from bones, have been portrayed, and
in such a way as to impart an ape-like appearance. Just about all the
world's most prominent news agencies used this deceptive reconstruction
in reporting the discovery of Homo floresiensis. A fossil that
actually totally undermines evolutionary scenarios was thus distorted
and depicted to millions as if it were actually evidence for Darwinism.
What H. floresiensis Reveals about the Myth of Evolution
Paleoanthropologist
Peter Brown
For more than a century now, evolutionists have been claiming that
there was an increase in brain volume during the imaginary human evolution process.
They also relate the myth that during this fictitious process human beings acquired
the intellect and powers of creativity and speech they possess in parallel to
the growth in brain volume. None of these tales is of any scientific value,
however. Henry Gee, editor of the journal Nature and an evolutionist who has
written many articles and books on the subject of evolution, admitted as much
in his book In Search of Deep Time:
For example, the evolution of Man is said to have been driven
by improvements in posture, brain size, and the coordination between hand
and eye, which led to technological achievements such as fire, the manufacture
of tools, and the use of language. But such scenarios are subjective. They
can never be tested by experiment, and so they are unscientific. (xii)
With the discovery of H. floresiensis, the myth that human
intelligence emerged together with increase in brain volume has become even
less credible than ever. That is because H. floresiensis, with a brain
volume no larger than that of a chimpanzee, exhibits behaviour no different
to that of a large-brained human being, thus proving that human intelligence
and mental ability are not proportional to brain volume.
That is the exact meaning of Henry Gee's words in interpreting
the discovery of H. floresiensis: "The whole idea that you need a particular
brain size to do anything intelligent is completely blown away by this find."
(xiii)
"Little Lady of Flores Forces Rethink of Human Evolution"
The real shock for evolutionists came from learning that an alleged
hominid with such a small brain volume lived not millions of years ago but only
18,000 years previously. Chris Stringer from London's Natural History Museum
admits his astonishment thus:
"Here is a creature with a brain the size of a chimpanzee's,
but apparently a tool-maker and hunter, and perhaps descended from the world's
first mariners. Its very existence shows how little we know about human evolution.
I could never have imagined a creature like this, living as recently as this."
(xiv)
Peter Brown, one of the leaders of the research team, describes
his astonishment when he measured the skull, and admits that H. floresiensis
is totally incompatible with evolutionary accounts: "Small stature is easy to
accommodate, but small brain size is a bigger problem - it still is." (xv)
The Nature journal news service that published the discovery
of H. floresiensis summarizes the dilemma facing evolutionists in the
headline it chose, "Little Lady of Flores Forces Rethink of Human Evolution."
Problems, astonishment, confused statements, a theory in need of
a rethink …
Evolutionists' own statements reflect the heavy blow the fossil
in question has dealt to the illusory scenario of human evolution. Furthermore,
the depiction of these fossils as evidence for evolution in the media shows
once again that Darwinism is a belief system kept blindly alive in the face
of the facts, since evolutionists still refuse to abandon their theory in the
face of the fossil findings that have recently totally demolished the myths
they recounted so tirelessly for so many years. Evolutionists gloss over every
new blow dealt to their scenarios by new discoveries by saying, in effect, "that
means we evolved not in this way, but in that," and still attempt to keep the
myth of evolution they support so blindly alive behind a scientific mask.
Conclusion:
The game played by evolutionists by interpreting variations in
ancient bones according to their own preconceptions consists of window-dressing
scenarios of human evolution in any way they choose. It needs to be realized
that telling fairy tales based on the similarity of bones is a pointless activity
in the face of the true facts.
Organs possessed by human beings, such as the eye, ear and heart,
exhibit a complexity that cannot be explained in terms of random occurrences.
Modern science has revealed that chance has no power even to produce a single
one of the tens of thousands of proteins in one single cell among all the trillions
in the human body, let alone an entire organ.
With the perfect organs and systems they possess, human beings
exhibit an evident design. Medical textbooks and encyclopaedias document the
scale of the complex information on which that design is based. There can be
no doubt that the origin of a human being with such a perfect, information-based
design, is "creation."
It is Almighty God, the Creator of All, Who creates human beings,
and He has no partners in His creation. This truth has been revealed in the
Qur'an:
"Do you then disbelieve in Him Who created you from dust,
then from a drop of sperm, and then formed you as a man? He is, however, God,
my Lord, and I will not associate anyone with my Lord." (Qur'an, 18: 37-38)
(*) The term variation is used in biology to describe differences
from a known form, function or structure. The term is also used to describe
an organism that exhibits such differences.
i Robert Locke, The first
human?, Discovering Archaeology, July - August 1999, p. 36
ii Julianna Kettlewell, "Skull fuels Homo erectus debate", 2 July 2004, http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/3857113.stm
iii Robert Locke, ibid
iv Carl Wieland, "Soggy dwarf bones", http://answersingenesis.org/docs2004/1028dwarf.asp
v Brown P. et al. Nature, 431. 1055 - 1061 (2004).
vi Morwood M. J. et al. Nature, 431. 1087 - 1091(2004)
vii Kate Wong, "Digging Deeper: Q&A with Peter Brown", 27 October 2004,
http://sciam.com/article.cfm?chanID=sa004&articleID=00082F87-7D35-117E-BD3583414B7F0000
viii Lister A., et al. Symposia of the Zoological Society of London, 69. 277
- 292 (1996); Marta Mirazon Lahr & Robert Foley, "Human evolution writ small",
27 October 2004, http://www.nature.com/news/2004/041025/full/4311043a.html
ix Morwood M. J. Nature, 392. 173 - 176 (1998)
x Marta Mirazon Lahr & Robert Foley, "Human evolution writ small", 27 October
2004, http://www.nature.com/news/2004/041025/full/4311043a.html
xi C. C. Swisher III, W. J. Rink, S. C. Antón, H. P. Schwarcz, G. H. Curtis,
A. Suprijo, "Latest Homo erectus of Java: Potential Contemporaneity with Homo
sapiens in Southeast
Asia" Science, Vol 274, Issue 5294, 1870-1874 , 13 December 1996
xii Henry Gee, In Search Of Deep Time: Beyond The Fossil Record To A New
Hýstory Of Life, The Free Press, A Division of Simon & Schuster, Inc.,
1999, p. 5
xiii 'Hobbit' joins human family tree, 27 October 2004, http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/3948165.stm
xiv "Our not so distant relative", The Guardian, 28 October 2004, http://www.guardian.co.uk/life/feature/story/0,13026,1337198,00.html
xv " Our not so distant relative", The Guardian, 28 October 2004.