Monday, July 23, 2012

Lucy: Do The Scams Never End?

When Lucy, the famous Australopithecus afarensis speciemen, was discovered in 1974, only 47 out of 207 bones were found. Most of her hands, feet, and skull were missing. But that didn't stop evolutionists from parading Lucy around as the one who could have tromped across Africa.

An Ever Changing Storyhttp://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?e=001Lk4K8I_k0rnZi25tHkC1l05GjDTxNvZEcUx4yQ0oeXTQNdgJLNO1uKZF-W-fSkKIRjyw2MveTksuT1IDzTiakGiUszGGBOtp6aa5BkCHDi5B-hOllAmf8rdjGPMceDJau988nAEluFdoYO1fQvtioDw30mRqVU8uoaxuIMw6Tl8j5VrhtIxRBv4-YjqO-Yl6pSFphAHbvX6P9BOf_0PY9eeW757ty21vissV7-MibhSNiH1oKusPOTeOX4R1yTcv5adLirljiGQ=.
Since 1974, however, more bones have been recovered from other members of Lucy's species. Her toes have been shown to curve like tree-dwelling apes; her shoulders have been found to be nearly identical to living great apes; her wrists resemble those of other knuckle-walking ape species; and her hands - far from being like human hands - are similar to those of chimpanzees. In other words, she was an ape - a tree-climbing, knuckle-walking, amazingly designed ape. [AIG.]

Phew.