Humanzee Proven New Chimpanzee?, page
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ATS Members have flagged this thread 5 times
Topic started on 23-2-2009 @ 01:13 AM by UnitedSatesofFreemasons

“‘Oliver’ is a habitually bipedal ape that has captured the imagination of both laypeople and scientists. He has been touted as a relict australopithecine, a bigfoot, or even the result of a clandestine human-chimp hybridization experiment. After years of lively debate, Oliver’s DNA was sampled to settle the issue and perhaps provide us with a breathing version of the missing link. The results are in … and, alas, Oliver is just a standard-issue chimpanzee with a penchant for walking.”

forgetomori.com...





Very interesting that no other Oliver type animals have been found since. Is he a freak of nature, or simply undiscovered species of Ape. Either way is captivated me and I am sure it has been posted on here before, but maybe this is just a refresher or, as in my case, the first time people will hear of oliver.

He is now blind and 40 living out his days at a rescue center in California. Which is very good to hear considering his position previously being held in a cage for 9 years for experimental research.

If you think this should be known, please flag


[edit on 23-2-2009 by UnitedSatesofFreemasons]


reply posted on 23-2-2009 @ 11:41 AM by Aeons
Consider that many of the changes to species over time have been changes to accomodate some change in their environment. That a singluar change that could be "hard coded" from a couple of individuals with some mutational difference then precipatates through the population.

Our ancestors seem to have been not well adapted in body to the sudden changes that occured in their enviroment. Multiple changes that happened fairly quickly, and caused a significant reduction in the number of individuals breeding multiple times. A "hard coded" change - an change to something that could be instinctual - was not a useful survival technique. The changes to the environment on our soft slow bodies could only be dealt with through non-instinctual behaviours. Thought. Reasoning. Adaptive minds.

Because we constantly now change our environment, and challenge the animals that are around us they are now ALSO coming into contact with a similar environmental force. A force that defies reliance on instinctual behaviours, because that force changes constantly.

Dogs have dealt with this by literally altering their DNA to become super hypervariable, with the ability to truncate genetically linked behaviours so as to be adaptive to living with humans. That's AMAZING when you think about it.

We impact the environment, and we are the environmental factor that changes the genetic "goal posts" of other species. Simply by existing, we will challenge and therefore change the species on this planet. In some cases that will mean extinction. But for the species that have highly adaptive genetics or behaviour, it means that those species will start to change rapidly to accomodate. Like the insects have already started to do. One of those changes that is entirely possible (and our existence proves it is possible) is that some of them will begin to think beyond instinct. Just to survive being on the World with us.

The world is not static. Genes are not static. We are distinctly not static. Our impact is going to drive species change. That our siblings are showing adaptive changes similar to ours should be EXPECTED.

The question then becomes - what the hell are we going to do when we take responsibility for the fact that our "not human" companion/sibling species start showing signs of intellect, conscious thought, etc because of us?


reply posted on 24-2-2009 @ 06:18 PM by BigfootNZ
Originally posted by Aeons
The question then becomes - what the hell are we going to do when we take responsibility for the fact that our "not human" companion/sibling species start showing signs of intellect, conscious thought, etc because of us?


Id rephrase that question to "what do we do when we finally realise that our 'non human' animal brethren always had intellect and conscious thought before we even began thinking we where the only ones out of all of them to do so?".

Im around animals 24/7 with 8 cats, a horse, a neighbors dog... a garden laden with birds, and bushs and flowering trees covered in insects of all kinds... heck I even spend parts of my day watching lots of praying mantis's outside the window going about their hunting and interacting (we got alot of prey mantis around our property). Theres more than just mindless automatic reaction going on behind those eyes. Although i do believe that it is or at least it should be humanities job to express and develope the potential of all other life forms.

All animals are created equally and that includes old mankind, even if one specific species seems to have a rather enlarged self view of itself. Problem is if you start to think about that you realise just how rough we treat a good majority of the other life forms on this planet, who apart from shape and varying level of conciousness are no different than ourselves.

Anyway to the OP nice to bring old Oliver up, Oliver was one of my first interests in cryptozoology. Was disheartening to learn he was just an ordinary if extra ordinary chimp about 8 years ago but he's still one of the best curiosities.

Thing is, i was under the impression he had died by now?... since he was 40 or so a good number of years ago (whats the highest lifespan for a chimp usually?) and there was if I remember an issue with money funding at Primarily Primates where he was being looked after?.. although I could be wrong on that. Think I'll go do a little research and find out if their still in business.

Edit:- looks like my clock was off, years, a decades pffft whats the difference, good to see he's still alive and well and happy still. Forgot I got that Humanzee Doco on tape, think ill go pull it out and watch it again.


[edit on 24-2-2009 by BigfootNZ]


reply posted on 28-9-2011 @ 06:04 AM by blupblup
Well some interesting stuff to read in these links

Missing links have been found countless times and It's really only the "creationists" and alike who even carry on about "the missing link"



blogs.telegraph.co.uk...



The problem is that it (The term Missing Link) implies that something is missing. I suppose in one sense something is: the fossils of 99.99999 per cent of all the animals and plants that have ever lived. But in the specific sense of "a fossil that is neither entirely an ape nor entirely a human but somewhere between the two", there are lots and lots.

Wikipedia, the journalist's friend, has a wonderful list of so-called "transitional fossils" (my favourite is Tiktaalik, the halfway house between a fish and an amphibian), and in its "Human evolution" section, it lists:
• Ardipithecus, "Intermediate between the last common ancestor of chimps and humans, and the australopithecines"

• Australopithecus, "Intermediate between extinct quadrupedal and bipedal apes. While the relationship between some species are being revised, Australopithecus afarensis is considered to be, by most experts, the ancestor to all later hominids."

• Homo habilis, "Perfect intermediate between early hominids and later humans, possibly ancestral to modern humans."


• Homo erectus, "Ancestral to modern humans and neanderthals."

Where among these do the apes stop and the humans begin? Some want to call Australopithecus a human, some an ape, although as you can tell from the Latin names (Australopithecus, "southern ape"; Homo habilis, "handy man") the consensus is the latter. There is a serious campaign to get modern chimpanzees reclassified into the Homo genus, because they're so similar to us; the line between humanity and ape is completely arbitrary. Australopithecus sideba is later than Australopithecus africanus, and shares many features with early Homo. So it is, if you must, the missing link between Australopithecus africanus and Homo habilis. But now we have a problem. There's a missing link between Australopithecus sediba and Homo habilis! And – look – another between Australopithecus africanus and sediba! Now there are TWO gaps! This point has been made before, but it's a serious one. The fossil record is remarkably full, given the hugely unlikely set of circumstances required to create a fossil.




www.guardian.co.uk...

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