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Monday, September 03, 2012

Islamic creationism vs what really happened when the modern human was born


Gene and art findings now overwhelmingly support Klevius decade old theory on the birth of modern humans


From southern pygmy pre-moderns to modern humans in the cold Siberian north (see details on Klevius anthropology blog) .


This irrefutable art track in Northern Eurasia has no contemporary equivalentin other parts of the world. Based on what we know now it had no fore bearers whatsoever in any period of time. Moreover, it seems that there was even a decline before "civilizations" started tens of thousands of years later! Yet Klevius seems to be only one addressing this most interesting (besides genetics) fact!



to understand the pic please visit Klevius anthropology


When the diminutive Homo Floresiensis, with a brain size barely above a chimp yet capable of producing sophisticated stone tools etc., was presented in 2004 an Indonesian muslim "anthropologist" made his utmost to dismiss the finding because islam doesn't approve of the evolution of humans.




To PC-people and others with a racist agenda blurring the facts: Non-African art from 40,000 - 25,000 years ago - i.e. long before anything like this emerged in Mideast or Africa! And one thing is for certain, they weren't neolithic farmers!


The oldest and most sophisticated piece of art ever found. Bite it!



This extremely complicated to manufacture stone bracelet was made in Siberia/Altai 40,000 years ago by utilizing a drilling technology, comparable to modern machines, according to the researchers who found it.




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In Dolní Věstonice, Central-Europe, an extremely well sculptured portrait is dated to 29,000 years ago, i.e. even earlier than the Brassempouy "Venus" portrait below, which was found in Mid-France.



















Brassempouy "Venus" approx 26,000 BP
















and with some make up by Klevius








































Nothing even close to these has ever been found outside the cold but protein rich Eurasian steppe area from Siberia throughout central Europe.

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