luglio 23rd, 2012
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Research of molecular biologists and geneticists on mitochondria date back to 300-250 thousand BC with the appearance of the first female ancestor of all women (the so-called “Mitochondrial Eve”) and all males, whose mitochondria as renown, could only be transmitted by female eggs because they are too large to be contained in the spermatozoon.
The amount of genetic material that distinguishes us from Pan paniscus and Pan troglodites (the two chimpanzee species closest to us) is less than 2% DNA!
And yet, evolutionists are questioning the extreme rapidity with which the hominid has progressed in its development compared to its cousins; there is no easy answer and, indeed, an answer has not been found yet: shall it be found in the hypothetical intervention of genetic engineering carried on by the ANUNNAKI, which would have accelerated the evolutionary process, promoting one species rather than the other?
• Professor Umberto Galimberti, a teacher the Philosophy of History at the University of Venice, writes that, at some point in development, the human beings have undergone a sort of “devolution”, a break in the evolutionary process resulting from the loss of stabilization furnished, as for all other animals, by instinct. Since then, man has never had a specific relationship with any particular environment, but had to unfold to the world and build a liveable environment: man is open to all environments, because, by now, he is appropriate to none.
Seemingly, this need to build a world by changing the environment would have produced “consciousness” (though, we note that Galimberti did not provide an explanation about the origin and the moment when man lost the instinctual stabilization…a mystery!)
• Recent archaeological discoveries have dated back to the start of the artistic production from 35 to 77 thousand years ago: 300 pieces of red and yellow ochre, discovered in Zambia even move its beginning to 350-400 thousand years ago. 28 bone tools and thousands of fragments of iron oxide (a derivate of ochre), discovered in South Africa, show that more than 200,000 years ago, man worked his objects for purposes that transcended mere utilitarian function: they were finished, decorated, polished and carved with distinguishing signs.
• Dr. Steven Scherer, director of the project of human genetics’ mapping at Baylor College of Medicine’s Human Genome Centre in Houston, in 2001 wrote that in the human genome there are at least 200 genes that appear “foreign” to the whole heritage that unites men to other vertebrates.
These genes do not even belong to invertebrates and have therefore been “acquired after the evolutionary ladder in a completely inexplicable way”.
• Tim Crow, teacher of Psychiatry at Oxford and a member of the Medical Research Council in England, believes that about 150.000 years ago, mankind has made an “evolutionary leap” acquiring the ability to speak due to a translocation of a gene on the Y chromosome.