Domain: earthlife.net
Stories and comments across the archive that link to earthlife.net.
Comments · 8
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Re:Bees have a guide
What amazes me though is how they look at another bee and visualize it traveling to a set patch of flowers, by looking at its dance.
Are we discussing bumble bees or honey bees? The summary says bumble bees.
http://www.earthlife.net/insects/socbees.html states that bumble bees "...have not evolved any means of communicating information reguarding utilisable resources."
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Re:Under Who's Watch?
Dinosaurs were around between 230-65 million years ago, not even close to 500 millions years ago. Mammals appeared around the time of dinosaurs (link, link), but still well after 500 million years ago.
Similarly, a specific species (i.e. rabbits) appearing in the precambrian period (4500-540 million years ago) well before our understanding of its evolution (and that of its ancestors) would be a major issue for evolutionary theory.
Note that both of these are cases of species appearing massively outside our understanding of their development. The finding of a human footprint next to a fossilized dinosaur bone could be explained by something as mundane as erosion and new layers (I'm too lazy to go into detail).
Finding a fossilized human net to a fossilized dinosaur in the same layer of rock would be far more difficult to explain... but would still not be completely out of the possibility of explanation through evolution (just require some significant review of what we know and how it works). -
Re:dinosaurs
Dinosaur Spokesman: We had a good what, hundred, two hundred million year run? How long you human critters been around? Two mil? Odds on making it to three?
--- Mammalian spokessloth/person/elephant: We've been crawling around this rock, or swinging in the trees, for over 200 million years already. And we don't let a little thing like hot iridium dust get in the way between us and world domination. [thumbs hairy snouts at fossils] So nyer. [/thumbs hairy snouts at fossils] -
Re:But from where...
In that case, the purpose of the web is imputed by the observer
Until you see Dinopis guatemalensis the Net Casting Spider which fashions a net, hangs by a silk with the net held in its legs and waits for supper to happen by.
As for chimps using spears, I know they are capable of using teamwork to catch, kill and eat small monkeys and they occasionally use sticks as clubs in threat gestures, beating the ground. Don't know if they have learned to kill other animals with clubs and I think spears are something this particular group of animals learned from outside their society. Just my two cents worth.
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Re:The obligatory argument for IDFairly sure. See this link note they state that birds have a blind spot, This implies that the eye construction is basically the same.
Besides, eyes evolved in our common ancestor before mammals and reptiles/dinosaurs diverged. So if birds eyes do not have these flaws, then this would disprove most of our theories of how birds and mammals evolved. If not evolution itself
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Re:You missed the *most* important point.There are inumerable young attractive women married/engaged/attached to ugly old successful men who have money. Relatively few who are married/engaged/attached to ugly old unsuccessful men who have no money.
I'd go as far as to say that almost the whole of human society is based on the male drive to impress females. It's all feathers.
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Re:One unfortuate side effect...
Apparently this will open new doors for ritual bondage before mating as well. "In some species males use silk to ritually immobilise the females before mating..."
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Re:High Frequencies
Mosquitos have no such hearing capacity
A simple Google search found this at Earthlife.net: Sound is very important to mosquitos for a number of reasons one of these is the location of mates. The antennae of male mosquitoes are sensitive to the sounds created by the beating wings of females of the same species. Because females are usually larger than the males, the wings of males and females beat at different frequencies. This makes it possible for males to distinguish females from males based on the sound of the beating wings and helps in the detection of females of the right species
So they do hear high sounds (and probably very faint sounds, too), though there is no mention of them actually recognizing their enemies from sound. There are lots of those electronic gadgets available, though.
- FF