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Allan Shumaker Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > I agree with the conclusion that small carnivores > are responsible for the ‘mutilations’ observed on > the carcasses. I have seen numerous photos of the > lips, sometimes the tongue, ears, eyes, udders, > scrotums and anuses missing. Yep, the null hyp. is 'natural causes' have to beby Lee Olsen - Laboratory
and more recently: and a referenced article on previous scientific studies: "They concluded: the mutilations are the work of scavenger animals, mainly coyotes and birds; the mutilations occur after the animal has died; and any investigation of bizarre gross findings in dead cattle must rule out scavenging beyond any reasonable doubt before proceeding to investigation of other posby Lee Olsen - Laboratory
From the comments section: Dr. Charles Payet March 15, 2014 / 4:14 pm "It really seems that journalists have their biggest problem with the idea of false equivalency across many different fields. It ties in so nicely with the idea that you have to “present both sides of the story,” when in fact, the search for accuracy requires no such thing. If an idea is junk, it deserves ZERO airtimeby Lee Olsen - Laboratory
Hans Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > No pandering to GH - I promise you he'll never let > you write a pre-debunking proem (spelled > correctly) for his next book. Graham says: "All archaeologists admit this now, that Clovis-First was a mistake" #{"issue_id":104941,"view":"articleBrowser",by Lee Olsen - Ancient History
Hermione Wrote: > > Ah, but how do you know that the Earth Crustal > Displacement wasn't caused by a comet? By my telekinetic powers that I inherited from the Lost Civilizationby Lee Olsen - Ancient History
"In Fingerprints of the Gods (1995), Hancock hypothesizes that the demise of the mammoths and other megafauna was caused by a catastrophic cataclysm brought on through an Earth Crustal Displacement. The result was that "terrible forces were unleashed on all living creatures during the last Ice Age" and that "the northern regions of Alaska and Siberia appear to have been tby Lee Olsen - Ancient History
Hans Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > How often are his works cited by > scientists? "Graham Hancock is an entertainer and popular author who's never done an ounce of archaeology and whose only appearance in academia is when we ask ourselves, "Where did we go wrong that so many people like Graham Hancock?"by Lee Olsen - Ancient History
Rick Baudé Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > Lee Olsen Wrote: > -------------------------------------------------- > ----- > > Rick Baudé Wrote: > > > > "Advocates of 130 000-year-old > boulder-wielding, > > bone-cracking SoCal {southern Californian] > > hominions now have their work cut out for > them.by Lee Olsen - Ancient History
Rick Baudé Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > Critics are the scourge of creativity. This is pretty creative alright: "In Hancock's book Talisman: Sacred Cities, Secret Faith,[11] co-authored with Robert Bauval, the two put forward what sociologist of religion David V. Barrett called "a version of the old Jewish-Masonic plot so beloved byby Lee Olsen - Ancient History
Hans Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > > His weak nonsense threaten no one but other > members of the fringe. Right, but the sad thing is there aren't many of them compared to the earth's total population, but those are the ones that do most of the damage. The press treats them like equals to give balance, when in reality they are justby Lee Olsen - Ancient History
The mediocre mind > is incapable of understanding the man who refuses > to bow blindly to conventional prejudices and > chooses instead to express his opinions > courageously and honestly. > Author: Albert Einstein (1879 - 1955) Physicist > & ... I guess he found out his conventional prejudices were wrong and was forced to retract his original honesty: So muchby Lee Olsen - Ancient History
Rick Baudé Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > I said What you said isn't evidence, it's just opinion. "Graham Hancock is an entertainer and popular author who's never done an ounce of archaeology and whose only appearance in academia is when we ask ourselves, "Where did we go wrong that so many people like Graham Hancock?&quoby Lee Olsen - Ancient History
"In Hancock's book Talisman: Sacred Cities, Secret Faith,[11] co-authored with Robert Bauval, the two put forward what sociologist of religion David V. Barrett called "a version of the old Jewish-Masonic plot so beloved by ultra-right-wing conspiracy theorists."[12] They suggest a connection between the pillars of Solomon's Temple and the Twin Towers, and between the Stby Lee Olsen - Ancient History
Rick Baudé Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > > Are you kidding? Since there are no green mastodon bones left to test without cheap bait and switch plans. pseudoscience wins I guess. "Advocates of 130 000-year-old boulder-wielding, bone-cracking SoCal {southern Californian] hominions now have their work cut out for them. Until that work isby Lee Olsen - Ancient History
Rick Baudé Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > > > Since you're so hyper-focused on bone residue, Yeah, there are a lot of us...Demere, Fagan, Duke, O'Grady. Back in the 1990s there used to be a lot of critics. Looks like another field, like DNA, is improving.by Lee Olsen - Ancient History
Rick Baudé Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > My examination of the broken bone fragments in the > Cerutti Mastodon Site collection indicates that > the hypothesis of breakage by modern heavy > machinery is invalid, That's what I said. That isn't what others have said in the literature behind the pay walls. As I said before, for the timby Lee Olsen - Ancient History
Rick Baudé Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- I already > know 99% of what the article is about. Amazing. Let us know when you can replicate two broken mastodon femur balls by experiment (using actual evidence found at the site).by Lee Olsen - Ancient History
Rick Baudé Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > You do that. Keep me up to date on what happens. > Well then, for those who care, like the Cerutti Team: "Yes. Deméré and his colleagues are currently examining the stone tools from the site for protein residues. If they really were used to smash the mastodon bone, microscopic bits of mastodon likelby Lee Olsen - Ancient History
Rick Baudé Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > I read all the critical ones. How do you know that?by Lee Olsen - Ancient History
Rick Baudé Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > Lee Olsen Wrote: > -------------------------------------------------- > ----- > > Rick Baudé Wrote: > > > -------------------------------------------------- > > > ----- > > > > > How many doubters have come? FWICS so > far > > zero. PhD Ruth Gruhnby Lee Olsen - Ancient History
Rick Baudé Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > Construction equipment creating Cerutti has been > repeatedly refuted in the literature. Question: How do you know its been repeatedly refuted in the literature when: Rick: "Everything is behind paywalls these days. Sad? More like tragic." Are you sure you have read all of the behind the paby Lee Olsen - Ancient History
Hans Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > > > Yep, I wonder where is next book will have the > 'invisible civilization' appearing? Urals? With the Lost Civilization's telekinetic-powers, he might try Mars...or beyond.by Lee Olsen - Ancient History
Rick Baudé Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > Another teaser hidden behind a paywall. Didn't someone on this forum claim they weren't short of research money...I must be mistaken, nah, must have been somewhere else. "In Hancock's book Talisman: Sacred Cities, Secret Faith,[11] co-authored with Robert Bauval, the two put forward whaby Lee Olsen - Ancient History
Rick Baudé Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > > > Nope, I'm busy trying to work on a book that will > piss off white supremacists to thermonuclear > proportions right now but I keep getting bogged > down in arguments about Cerutti. Well, instead of fighting the ESP crowd, I'm going over and duel it out with the big boys of pby Lee Olsen - Ancient History
Rick Baudé Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > How many doubters have come? FWICS so far zero. "FWICS so far zero" Myself, I got new glasses and found two PhDs that have been to the museum and looked first hand at the data. Are you saying they are zeros?by Lee Olsen - Ancient History
Rick Baudé Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > Lee Olsen Wrote: > -------------------------------------------------- > ----- > > Rick Baudé Wrote: > > > -------------------------------------------------- > > > > > > > "Advocates of 130 000-year-old > boulder-wielding, > > bone-cracking SoCal hoby Lee Olsen - Ancient History
Rick Baudé Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > Strange how nobody ever reads Hancock Perhaps you are looking in the wrong place: "In Hancock's book Talisman: Sacred Cities, Secret Faith,[11] co-authored with Robert Bauval, the two put forward what sociologist of religion David V. Barrett called "a version of the old Jewish-Masonic plot so belby Lee Olsen - Ancient History
"Advocates of 130 000-year-old boulder-wielding, bone-cracking SoCal {southern Californian] hominions now have their work cut out for them. Until that work is robustly evaluated and replicated, there is no reason to incorporate the Cerutti Mastodon site into their New World colonization frameworks." Keyword: replicatedby Lee Olsen - Ancient History
Rick Baudé Wrote: > Ought to know what? "David Meltzer, an archaeologist at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas, who co-wrote an earlier critique4 of the 2017 study, is glad to see other groups questioning the strength of the evidence. Meltzer says that he is open to the idea that humans reached the Americas more than 100,000 years before he thought — just notby Lee Olsen - Ancient History
Hans Wrote: > > I use to donate money, time, equipment and > supplies directly to sites - that works better and > you get a good briefing and updates! Great idea! So I volunteered to pay for the XRF sourcing for this orange-colored tool: I finally got to see it in person, hold it, photograph it, and best of all Dr. O'Grady is interested in my orange chalcedony findby Lee Olsen - Ancient History