Sunday, November 15, 2009
Tuesday, October 27, 2009
A proposal for research: Hominid archaeology in Idaho's Salmon National Forest mountain limestone caves
I. Introduction
The phenomenon of repeated reports of "wild men" and "hairy monsters" throughout the history of the world is well-known in native and folk lore
Krantz proposed that these reports were correlated to a long-thought extinct ancient species of Asian primate, Gigantopithecus blacki
The legend of the European "Wildman" has extensive literary and artistic presence throughout the continent of Europe since the late Middle Ages, yet is widely considered to be fiction
It is possible that this fictional iconic status of wild man folklore in Europe became an episode of cultural transference in North America as colonies were settled in the 17th and 18th centuries, attributing early American accounts of bigfoot or sasquatch to similar European lore, and quite possibly incorrect categorization
Interestingly, the evidence of multiple-species hominid cohabitation is clear as recently as 15 kyr (thousand years) ago in a region in the eastern Mediterranean known as the Levant where Homo sapiens and Homo neanderthalensis have been confirmed via stable isotope analysis to have shared some cultural aspects
In Flores, part of the Indonesian island arc, an entirely new hominin species was discovered in 2004. Homo floresiensis was initially theorized to have originated from a Homo erectus population that had come to the island before 840 kyr ago, but more recent study suggests ancestry from Australopithicene
While this paper does not focus primarily on the Flores discovery, the importance of Homo floresiensis to the overall picture of hominid radiation should not be underestimated. The unusual morphology of the specimens, namely the small intracranial size, has all but nullified legacy theories of brain evolution for primates (Baab & McNulty, 2008). It has also opened up the human evolutionary tree to many branches that were never considered before (Argue, Morwood, Sutikna, Jatmiko, & Saptomo, 2009) and the variety of hominid species that have shared the planet with Homo sapiens. In light of this new understanding of the limitations of the past hominid evolutionary models, further questions erupt into the potential for North American hominid appearance in history, and evidence yet to be discovered to support these concepts.
IV. Discussion
Since evidence of overlap between multiple hominid species in Eurasia and Africa is plentiful via the archaeological record
Many limestone caves exist in the mountainous regions of the western United States
Can targeted excavations of existing limestone caves in remote western regions of North America reveal archaic hominid radiation other than Homo sapiens into that continent, and possibly inter-species cohabitation that has been previously undiscovered? The question presents many problems to surmount such as remote location access, general lack of species habitation data, and the tendency of modern academia to push this type of study into the fringes of science.
On the other hand, the potentially incorrect scientific notion of Homo sapiens as the sole remaining bipedal primate has historically been biased by western religious cultural implications of humankind's superiority as a species on Earth
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