Fictitious 'Ape Men'
Time magazine's new ape-man
Publication's latest evolution contention less-than-believable
In 1999, following the controversial de-emphasis of evolution in
Kansas schools, Time magazine struck in its August 23 issue with
an editorial denouncing creationists and a huge cover story
called "How Man Evolved." The latter displayed man's supposed
oldest ancestor –Ardipithecus ramidus – while neglecting to tell
readers that its fragments had been found scattered over an area
of about one mile, and put together to form a "missing link."
Time's cover was of a reconstructed ape-man skull, yet well less
than half the skull consisted of actual fossil fragments – the
rest was plaster, molded by imagination. The most recent issue of
Time, dated July 23, takes no less liberty. On the cover is a
painting of an ape-man called Ardipithecus ramidus kadabba with
the headline "How Apes Became Human." Inside, the article begins:
"Meet your newfound ancestor." The painting is based on some
fragmentary bones recently found in Ethiopia by a graduate
student named Yohannes Haile-Selassie.
Time assures its readers that the creature walked upright. The
evidence for this? A single toe bone. Time displays the bone with
the unequivocal caption: "THIS TOE BONE PROVES THE CREATURE
WALKED ON TWO LEGS." But not until the last page of the
eight-page article do readers learn that the toe bone was
actually found some ten miles from the other bones. What evidence
exists that the toe bone belonged to Haile-Selassie's other
specimens? None, other than speculation.
There is great danger in basing conclusions on a single bone. In
1922, paleontologist Henry Fairfield Osborn, an ardent
evolutionist, was shown a single tooth found in Nebraska by
geologist Harold Cook. After examining it, Osborn declared it
belonged to an early ape-man, whom he named Hesperopithecus
haroldcookii in Cook's honor. Popularly, it became known as
"Nebraska Man." Osborn hailed the tooth as "the herald of
anthropoid apes in America."
At the American Museum of Natural History, William K. Gregory and Milo Hellman, specialists in teeth, said after careful study that the tooth was from a species closer to man than ape. Harris Hawthorne Wilder, a zoology professor at Smith College, wrote: "Judging from the tooth alone the animal seems to have been about halfway between Pithecanthropus [Java Man] and the man of the present day, or perhaps better between Pithecanthropus and the man of the Neanderthal type. ..."
In England,
evolutionist Grafton Elliot Smith convinced the Illustrated
London News to publish an artist's rendering of Nebraska Man. The
picture, which appeared in a two-page spread and received wide
distribution, showed two brutish, naked ape-persons, the male
with a club, the female gathering roots. All this from one tooth.
However, further excavations at Cook's site revealed that the
tooth belonged neither to ape nor man, but to a peccary, a close
relative of the pig.
Or take the Piltdown Man. It was declared an ape-man, 500,000
years old, and validated by many of Britain's leading scientists,
including Grafton Elliot Smith, anatomist Sir Arthur Keith and
British Museum geologist Arthur Smith Woodward. At the time the
discovery was announced (1912), the New York Times ran this
headline: "Darwin Theory Proved True." For the next four decades,
Piltdown Man was evolution's greatest showcase, featured in
textbooks and encyclopedias. But what did the Piltdown Man
actually consist of? A very recent orangutan jaw, which had been
stained to look old, with its teeth filed down to make them more
human-looking, planted together with a human skull bone, also
stained to create an appearance of age.
Those who think such mistakes no longer occur need only consider
the Archaeoraptor, promoted in a 10-page color spread in the
November 1999 National Geographic as the "true missing link"
between dinosaurs and birds. The fossil was displayed at National
Geographic's Explorers Hall and viewed by over 100,000 people.
However, it too turned out to be a fake – someone had simply
glued together fragments of bird and dinosaur fossils. Even if
Time
turns out to be correct, and Ardipithecus ramidus kadabba walked
on two feet, would it prove he was our "newfound ancestor"?
This assertion is based on a long-standing evolutionary
assumption, usually stated something like this: "Humans are the
only creatures that have evolved to the point where they can walk
on two feet; therefore, if we can find the fossil of an animal
that could walk on two feet, such a creature was our ancestor."
However, the assumption that two-footed mobility establishes
human kinship is groundless. Gorillas occasionally walk bipedally;
Tanzanian chimpanzees are seen standing on two legs when
gathering fruit from small trees; Zaire's pygmy chimpanzee walks
upright so often that it has been dubbed "a living link." Science
News reports of the latter: "Like modern gorillas they tend to be
knuckle-walkers on the ground, yet they seem to be natural
bipeds, too, frequently walking upright both on the ground and in
the trees." So even if a fossil creature did have some limited
ability to stand on two feet, it doesn't make it man's ancestor
any more than these modern apes.
And man is not the only bipedal creature. Birds are bipedal; so
was the T.-rex. Therefore, are they human ancestors? Time refers
to "fossil discoveries as far back as Java Man in the 1890s" as
validating the relationship between man and ape. But Time does
not relate much of what is known about those finds. The Java Man
story began with Ernst Haeckel, the German zoologist who has
become notorious for using fraudulent drawings of embryos to
prove the theory of evolution (See the July issue of WorldNet
Magazine). Haeckel was convinced that an ape-man must have
existed, and he named it Pithecanthropus alalus: ape-man without
speech.
One of Haeckel's students, Eugene Dubois, became determined to
find Pithecanthropus. Haeckel believed men might have separated
from apes somewhere in Southern Asia. So in 1887, Dubois signed
up as a doctor with the Dutch medical corps in the Dutch East
Indies (now Indonesia), intending to hunt for fossils during all
his spare time. Dubois, it should be noted, had no formal
training in geology or paleontology at the time, and his
"archaeological team" consisted of prison convicts with two army
corporals as supervisors.
Years of
excavation produced little of significance. Then, in 1891, along
Java's Solo River, the laborers dug up a skullcap that appeared
rather apelike, with a low forehead and large eyebrow ridges.
Dubois initially considered it from a chimpanzee, even though
there is no evidence that this ape ever lived in Asia. However,
the following year, the diggers unearthed a thigh bone that was
clearly human. Dubois, like Piltdown's discoverers, presumed that
an apelike bone somewhere near a human bone meant the two
belonged to the same creature, constituting Darwin's missing
link. Haeckel, who had not even seen the bones, telegraphed
Dubois: "From the inventor of Pithecanthropus to his happy
discoverer!"
In 1895, Dubois returned to Europe and displayed his fossils. The
response from experts was mixed, however. Rudolph Virchow, who
had once been Haeckel's professor and is regarded as the father
of modern pathology, said: "In my opinion, this creature was an
animal, a giant gibbon, in fact. The thigh bone
has not the slightest connection with the skull." The
circumstances of Dubois' find were unorthodox. He had apparently
been absent when the convicts dug up his fossils. Maps and
diagrams of the site were not made until after the excavation.
Under such conditions, a modern dig would be disregarded.
In 1907, an
expedition of German scientists from various disciplines, led by
Professor M. Lenore Selenka, traveled to Java seeking more clues
to man's ancestry in the region of Dubois' discovery. However, no
evidence for Pithecanthropus was found. In the stratum of Dubois'
find, the scientists found hearths and flora and fauna that
looked rather modern. The expedition's report also noted a nearby
volcano that caused periodic flooding in the area. Java Man had
been found in volcanic sediments. The report observed that the
chemical nature of those sediments, not ancient age, probably
caused the fossilization of Pithecanthropus. Nevertheless, the
Selenka findings and various deficiencies of Dubois' work were
largely ignored, and Java Man became one of evolution's
undisputed "facts."
Then there was Peking Man, worked on and validated by a number of
Piltdown alumni, including Davidson Black, Pierre Teilhard de
Chardin and Smith. In
seeing textbook portrayals of Peking Man, few students learned
that the skulls had been found in scattered little fragments, and
that the reconstructions were actually composites taken from
various individuals. Where fragments were missing, plaster
substituted, and the famous final images of Peking Man were the
creations of a sculptress named Lucille Swann. Later, all of the
Peking Man fossils mysteriously vanished, except for a couple of
teeth, preventing Peking Man from being subjected to the kind of
checking that doomed Piltdown Man.
Neanderthals were long portrayed as ape-men, stooped over. This
misconception was largely the result of a faulty reconstruction
by French paleontologist Marcellin Boule, who mistook the
skeleton of a man with kyphosis (hunchback) for an ape-man in the
process of becoming upright. Another snag: Neanderthal skulls are
larger than those of modern humans. This flies in the face of
evolutionary tradition, which says that man evolved progressively
from creatures with smaller brains and skulls. In any event,
Neanderthals are no longer classed as "ape-men," and some
evolutionists have even discarded them as human ancestors. Which
basically leaves us with australopithecines, currently in vogue
as man's ancestor.
However,
australopithecine fossils show that they had long forearms and
short hind legs, like today's apes. They also had long curved
fingers and toes, like those apes use for tree-swinging. This may
pose a problem for Time's thesis, since it claims the toe bone of
Ardipithecus ramidus kadabba was over 5 million years old, yet
relatively human-like – implying that it was more evolved than
the toes of australopithecines, who supposedly came 2 million
years later. The main substance to the claim that
australopithecines are our ancestors is some evidence suggesting
that the famed "Lucy" and her peers may have walked upright. But
as noted, limited bipedality does not prove human ancestry, and a
number of scientists – contrary to the impression created in Time
– have disagreed that australopithecines are man's relatives.
Britain's Lord Solly Zuckerman, who was raised to peerage for his
scientific achievements, was a leading authority on
australopithecines, having subjected them to years of biometric
testing. He stated:
For my own part, the anatomical basis for the claim that the
australopithecines walked and ran upright like man is so much
more flimsy than the evidence which points to the conclusion that
their gait was some variant of what one sees in subhuman
primates, that it remains unacceptable.
Charles Oxnard, former director of graduate studies and professor
of anatomy at the University of Southern California Medical
School, subjected australopithecine fossils to extensive computer
analysis. Stephen Jay Gould called him "our leading expert on the
quantitative study of skeletons." Oxnard concluded:
[T]he australopithecines known over the last several decades are
now irrevocably removed from a place in the evolution of human
bipedalism, possibly from a place in a group any closer to humans
than to African apes and certainly from any place in the direct
human lineage. All of this should make us wonder about the usual
presentation of human evolution in introductory textbooks, in
encyclopedias and in popular publications. In such volumes not
only are australopithecines described as being of known bodily
size and shape, but as possessing such abilities as bipedality
and tool-using and -making and such developments as the use of
fire and specific social structures. Even facial features are
happily (and non-scientifically) reconstructed.
The July 23 Time includes a graphic showing the evolution of man,
starting with the supposed Ardipithecus ramidus kadabba, with
progressively more human figures culminating in man. However, it
is very easy to arrange bones to demonstrate "evolutionary
progress." In 1927, Osborn, along with other evolutionists,
created a diagram of man's evolution. Skulls were displayed in
progressive order. No. 1 in the sequence was the fraudulent
Piltdown Man. No. 4 was a Neanderthal; No. 6 Cro-Magnon Man. No.
8 was labeled "Australian" (aborigine). No. 9? "Negro." No. 10?
"Chinese." No. 11 (and last)? "Caucasian."
Because 99 percent of an organism's biology resides in its soft
anatomy, it is very easy to invest a bone with imagination. For
this reason – despite the protests of Darwinists – evolutionary
anthropology is not a science like physics or chemistry. The laws
of physics and chemistry can be demonstrated in a high school
laboratory. Evolutionary anthropology, on the other hand,
consists of speculations about unobserved events that supposedly
occurred millions of years ago. Science cannot observe the past
with the same authority as the present. As Lowenstein and Zihlman
noted in New Scientist: "The subjective element in this approach
to building evolutionary trees, which many paleontologists
advocate with almost religious fervor, is demonstrated by the
outcome: There is no single family tree on which they agree."
There was a wealth of evidence concerning the assassination of
John F. Kennedy: hundreds of eyewitnesses interviewed by the
Warren Commission; the Zapruder movie that caught the actual
slaying; the autopsy; fingerprint evidence; ballistics evidence.
Nevertheless, controversy has never stopped raging about what
actually took place. Scores of books challenged the evidence,
offering widely differing explanations as to who killed Kennedy,
from what angle(s) he was shot, etc. Even the autopsy results
were challenged in a best-selling book.
Granted, the Kennedy assassination was a politically charged
event. Nonetheless, if that much disagreement can occur over
something that happened just 38 years ago, how can a
paleontologist pick up a fragment of bone, supposedly 5 million
years old, and declare its meaning with a high degree of
certainty? Unlike the Kennedy assassination, there are no
eyewitnesses who saw this creature, no Zapruder movie of it, no
soft tissues to examine.
Other weaknesses permeate the Time article. It states that
Haile-Selassie's bones are known to be 5.6-5.8 billion years old,
because this "can be accurately gauged by a technique known as
argon-argon dating." It says the result was "confirmed by a
second dating method." However, argon-argon dating has been
demonstrated in various studies to be unreliable, and Time
doesn't mention what the second method was.
Time refers to the "astonishingly complete skeleton of Lucy"– but
those words belie the fact that about 60 percent of Lucy's
skeleton, including most of
the skull, was missing.
In explaining why apes began to walk upright, Time quotes
anthropologist C. Owen Lovejoy: "To walk upright you have to do
so in synchrony. If the ligaments and muscles are out of synch,
that leads to injuries. And then you'd be cheetah meat." But even
fully coordinated, healthy human beings cannot outrun a cheetah!
Time also neglects the fact that species vary widely within
themselves.
Darwinian
anthropologists use cranial capacity (skull size) to judge the
evolutionary status of our supposed ancestors, but even in modern
humans, cranial capacity ranges from 700 to 2200 cubic
centimeters, and has no bearing on intelligence.People's bone
structure varies greatly, based on heredity, age, sex, health and
climate. Some are big-boned, some small-boned. There are sumo
wrestlers and pygmies. Doubtless, our ancient forebears were also
diverse in their looks. How, then, can one assign a single fossil
bone to a distinct place in human history? Apes vary widely, too;
australopithecines may simply be a type that became extinct.
Science journalist Roger Lewin, though an outspoken evolutionist,
has noted:
It is an unfortunate truth that fossils do not emerge from the
ground with labels already attached to them. And it is bad enough
that much of the labeling was done in the name of egoism and a
naive lack of appreciation of variation between individuals; each
nuance in shape was taken to indicate a difference in type rather
than natural variation within a population.
Another oddity surfaces in Time's diagram of the evolution of
humans, chimps and gorillas. Human ancestors are shown going back
almost 6 million years. But no chimpanzee or gorilla ancestors
are depicted before a million years ago. If chimps and humans
really diverged about 7 million years ago, as Time asserts, then
where are all the fossils of chimpanzee and gorilla ancestors?
Why does every bone fragment turn out to be a human ancestor?
Perhaps that question was answered by Dr. Tim White,
anthropologist at the University of California, Berkeley. Though
quoted in Time, and noted as Haile-Selassie's thesis adviser, he
has previously stated: "The problem with a lot of anthropologists
is that they want so much to find a hominid that any scrap of
bone becomes a hominid bone."
As creationist Marvin Lubenow notes, "No one will care if you
discover the oldest fossil broccoli, but if you are fortunate
enough to discover the oldest fossil human, the world will beat a
path to your door."