Como CREES que lucían los Neanderthales?

Re: Como CREES que lucían los Neanderthales?

jajajaajajajaajaja....jajajajaajajaja... vamos hombre vamos,,,, sigue esgrimiendo idioteces... jajajaajajajaja... jajajajaaj... jajajaajajajajajajajajajaja

así que los hombres se fueron quedando sin pelo por adaptación evolutiva a las chozas jajajaajajajaja....

creía que Uninauta era la antología de la imbecilidad... pero hombre, que tu lo estás haciendo muuuuuy bien

La epitome de lo imbecil eres tu... mira que decir chozas.. si si los humanos bajaron de los arboles para vivir en chozas... pobre y patetico payaso
 
Re: Como CREES que lucían los Neanderthales?

toma.. para que tu estupidez se encargue de maquillar lo que dice Nina G. Jablonski


Scientific American

THE SCIENCES
The Naked Truth: Why Humans Have No Fur
Recent findings lay bare the origins of human hairlessness—and hint that naked skin was a key factor in the emergence of other human traits
By Nina G. Jablonski on February 1, 2010

Among primates, humans are unique in having nearly naked skin. Every other member of our extended family has a dense covering of fur—from the short, black pelage of the howler monkey to the flowing copper coat of the orangutan—as do most other mammals. Yes, we humans have hair on our heads and elsewhere, but compared with our relatives, even the hairiest person is basically bare.


.. aprende al menos ingles para que entiendas que en ningun lado dice que el humano no tiene pelo... tu mismo te contradices y lo mas gracioso es que ni te das cuenta... deverias de colorear tambien donde dice que el humano tiene pelo en todos lados...
 
Re: Como CREES que lucían los Neanderthales?

.. aprende al menos ingles para que entiendas que en ningun lado dice que el humano no tiene pelo... tu mismo te contradices y lo mas gracioso es que ni te das cuenta... deverias de colorear tambien donde dice que el humano tiene pelo en todos lados...

jajaajaj.. tu imbecilidad está rompiendo record... .. en serio crees que la gente no se da cuenta?

que significa para tí ... hairlessness?... que significa para tí naked skin?... nearly naked skin?


que significa para tí compared with our relatives, even the hairiest person is basically bare.?

a ver.. cuéntanos.. jajajajaja

jejeje... y eso que te lo señalo en rojizas... jajajajajaj... clase de pendejo.
 
Re: Como CREES que lucían los Neanderthales?

No lo sabes? no se supone que eres el "experto" en neanderthales y que tu si sabes como lucian ? que tu trabajo es mucho mejor que el de antropologos que llevan decadas estudiandolos? y que tu mejor concepcion de ellos es la imagen de una pelicula? a quien quieres enganiar, no eres mas que un payaso...


aprende a leer zoquete.. YO DIGO QUE CREO QUE LUCIAN... CREO , CREO.. no lo puedo saber..

entonces tu CREES en ciertos antropólogos....YO LE CREO A OTROS... acaso a quien yo creo es más estúpido que en los que tú crees????? VAYA CLASE DE IMBECIL , QUE ya no solo es falta de lectura comprensiva
 
Re: Como CREES que lucían los Neanderthales?

Quote Originally Posted by realchristian View Post
se encontraron tambien caparazones decorados y "cajas" con residuos de pigmentos, tambien se encontro un hueso con la punta llena de pigmento.. .

a ver zoquete ..y de esto? ... solo tu palabra? ...

tic tac , tic tac...

y por favor .. que alguien venga acá , así como le aclararon a respecto a que la evolución dice que todos los organismos tenemos un antecesor común , a aclarle a este idiota que los humanos no están llenos de pelos... por favor a ver si alguien le convence que ni el más básico Wiki puede hacerlo
 
Re: Como CREES que lucían los Neanderthales?

Alber... podria co testarme aca?



Al parecer eran individuos robustos, con un tórax en barril y extremidades cortas. La cabeza tendría unos arcos supraorbitales bien marcados y la frente baja e inclinada. La mandíbula no tendría mentón (este es un rasgo nuestro relacionado con el aumento del cerebro). Por ahí más o menos iría la cosa.

Salu2

Hay lguna diferencia de nomenclatura entre los terminos "individuo"y "ejemplar"? Lo pregunto porque la mayoria de las veces los veo asociados i dividuo a los seres humanos y ejemplares a los a imales.... eso es así o solo so ideas mias?
Me podria aclarar si Ud pie sa que los ea derthales lucia mas como los simios co pelo o como los sapiens.... si cree que en su comportamiento social vivian como corilas o chimpances o como una tribu huma a?
 
Re: Como CREES que lucían los Neanderthales?

Y eso de que el H. sapiens no tenga pelo es lo mas tonto y absurdo.. y tal vez por porque no tenemos ninguna relacion con animales con abrigo de pelo es que tenemos las mismas reacciones fisiologicas a los mismos eventos.. has oido hablar de la goosebumps skin? o del termino "cabello erizado" cuando estas en una situacion de stress?

La falta de pelo largo y espeso como bien dices no es indicativo de ventaja evolutiva, pero se te olvida que en algun momento, el hombre fue capaz de modificar el ambiente en el que vivia, asi que la adaptacion se fue dando hacia los ambientes cerrados y controlados mas que a los ambientes abiertos en donde el pelo si es factor..

jejeje

Mark Pagel, head of the evolutionary biology group at the University of Reading in England and editor of The Encyclopedia of Evolution, fills us in:
We humans are conspicuous among the 5,000 or so mammal species in that we are effectively naked. Just consider what your pet dog or cat (or, for that matter, a polar bear) would look like, and how it might feel, if its furry coat were shorn.
Scientists have suggested three main explanations for why humans lack fur. All revolve around the idea that it may have been advantageous for our evolving lineage to have become less and less hairy during the six million years since we shared a common ancestor with our closest living relative, the chimpanzee.
The aquatic-ape hypothesis suggests that six million to eight million years ago apelike ancestors of modern humans had a semiaquatic lifestyle based on foraging for food in shallow waters. Fur is not an effective insulator in water, and so the theory asserts that we evolved to lose our fur, replacing it, as other aquatic mammals have, with relatively high levels of body fat. Imaginative as this explanation is—and helpful in providing us with an excuse for being overweight—paleontological evidence for an aquatic phase of human existence has proven elusive.
The second theory is that we lost our fur in order to control our body temperature when we adapted to life on the hot savannah. Our ape ancestors spent most of their time in cool forests, but a furry, upright hominid walking around in the sun would have overheated. The body-cooling idea seems sensible, but even though lacking fur might have made it easier for us to lose heat during the day, we also would have lost more heat at night, when we needed to retain it.
Recently, a colleague and I suggested that ancestors to modern humans became naked as a means to reduce the prevalence of external parasites that routinely infest fur. A furry coat provides an attractive and safe haven for insects such as ticks, lice, biting flies and other "ectoparasites." These creatures not only bring irritation and annoyance but carry viral, bacterial and protozoan-based diseases such as malaria, sleeping sickness, West Nile and Lyme disease, all of which can cause chronic medical problems and, in some cases, death. Humans, by virtue of being able to build fires, construct shelters and produce clothes, would have been able to lose their fur and thereby reduce the numbers of parasites they were carrying without suffering from the cold at night or in colder climates.
Human lice infections, which are confined to the hairy areas of our bodies, seem to support the parasite hypothesis. Naked mole rats, animals that can be described as resembling "overcooked sausages with buck teeth," also seem to support the theory: They live underground in large colonies, in which parasites would be readily transmitted. But the combined warmth of their bodies and the confined underground space probably negate the problem of losing heat to cold air for these animals, allowing them also to become naked.
Once hairlessness had evolved this way, it may have become subject to sexual selection—being a feature in one sex that appealed to another. Smooth, clear skin may have become a signal of health, like a peacock's tail, and could explain why women are naturally less hairy than men and why they put more effort into removing body hair. Despite exposing us to head lice, humans probably retained head hair for protection from the sun and to provide warmth when the air is cold. Pubic hair may have been retained for its role in enhancing pheromones or the airborne odors of sexual attraction.



http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/latest-theory-human-body-hair/

hay que avisarle al autor de la nueva teoría de realchristian para que la añada a las otras 3 de porque los humanos perdieron el pelo .. jaja.. bueno de hecho según realchristian están llenos de pelos... .. sería interesante que postee una foto de la novia... o de la mamá.
 
Re: Como CREES que lucían los Neanderthales?

a ver zoquete.. sigue haciendo el ridículo..
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN
What is the latest theory of why humans lost their body hair? Why are we the only hairless primate?


así que ahí no dice lo que dice.. jajajaajaja

vamos hombre... contínua, me encanta verte ..

Fanático irracional

jejeje

Mark Pagel, head of the evolutionary biology group at the University of Reading in England and editor of The Encyclopedia of Evolution, fills us in:
We humans are conspicuous among the 5,000 or so mammal species in that we are effectively naked. Just consider what your pet dog or cat (or, for that matter, a polar bear) would look like, and how it might feel, if its furry coat were shorn.
Scientists have suggested three main explanations for why humans lack fur. All revolve around the idea that it may have been advantageous for our evolving lineage to have become less and less hairy during the six million years since we shared a common ancestor with our closest living relative, the chimpanzee.
The aquatic-ape hypothesis suggests that six million to eight million years ago apelike ancestors of modern humans had a semiaquatic lifestyle based on foraging for food in shallow waters. Fur is not an effective insulator in water, and so the theory asserts that we evolved to lose our fur, replacing it, as other aquatic mammals have, with relatively high levels of body fat. Imaginative as this explanation is—and helpful in providing us with an excuse for being overweight—paleontological evidence for an aquatic phase of human existence has proven elusive.
The second theory is that we lost our fur in order to control our body temperature when we adapted to life on the hot savannah. Our ape ancestors spent most of their time in cool forests, but a furry, upright hominid walking around in the sun would have overheated. The body-cooling idea seems sensible, but even though lacking fur might have made it easier for us to lose heat during the day, we also would have lost more heat at night, when we needed to retain it.
Recently, a colleague and I suggested that ancestors to modern humans became naked as a means to reduce the prevalence of external parasites that routinely infest fur. A furry coat provides an attractive and safe haven for insects such as ticks, lice, biting flies and other "ectoparasites." These creatures not only bring irritation and annoyance but carry viral, bacterial and protozoan-based diseases such as malaria, sleeping sickness, West Nile and Lyme disease, all of which can cause chronic medical problems and, in some cases, death. Humans, by virtue of being able to build fires, construct shelters and produce clothes, would have been able to lose their fur and thereby reduce the numbers of parasites they were carrying without suffering from the cold at night or in colder climates.
Human lice infections, which are confined to the hairy areas of our bodies, seem to support the parasite hypothesis. Naked mole rats, animals that can be described as resembling "overcooked sausages with buck teeth," also seem to support the theory: They live underground in large colonies, in which parasites would be readily transmitted. But the combined warmth of their bodies and the confined underground space probably negate the problem of losing heat to cold air for these animals, allowing them also to become naked.
Once hairlessness had evolved this way, it may have become subject to sexual selection—being a feature in one sex that appealed to another. Smooth, clear skin may have become a signal of health, like a peacock's tail, and could explain why women are naturally less hairy than men and why they put more effort into removing body hair. Despite exposing us to head lice, humans probably retained head hair for protection from the sun and to provide warmth when the air is cold. Pubic hair may have been retained for its role in enhancing pheromones or the airborne odors of sexual attraction.



http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/latest-theory-human-body-hair/

hay que avisarle al autor de la nueva teoría de realchristian para que la añada a las otras 3 de porque los humanos perdieron el pelo .. jaja.. bueno de hecho según realchristian están llenos de pelos... .. sería interesante que postee una foto de la novia... o de la mamá.

Entiendes lo que lees zoquete?