![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Yes I am aware of that foolish dating of those poor fools ( they are
of course unable of reasoning otherwise indeed ) What happened is the Abos with their Woomeras, their Dingoes, their Boomerangs and followed by their ugly whores convened a huge Corroboree and in South Australia ... and then not only killed all those poor up to one ton animals in one go ....BUT AS WELL DRAGGED THEM ALL IN THE SAME CAVE IN THE SAME HEFTY & MIGHTY EFFORT ! NO, the poor doomed beasts did seek safety in any type of flight ... they waited with their mighty strength the Roo Leopard, the Roo Lion, the Roo Devil and probably bleating in fear accepted to be murdered without running away ! WHAT A GREAT BRAINY CONGREGATION OF DEFINITIVE POOR SODS ARE THOSE ANTIPODEAN FOOLS OF CURTIN, MONASH & THE ANU indeed .... and all this happened as far as 400 to 800 000 years ago ??? ... with the rest of the marsupial being slaughtered only 11 700 years ago ! That means that we have presently the longest lasting SLAUGHTERHOUSE ON EARTH .... and an ABO ' S ONE TO BOOST ! .... and some idiots have pretended up to now that those highly educated people had not the slightest sense of hygiene; WHAT A ****EN CALUMNY ! The reality is beyond understanding and it is that those scientific Antipodean fools and every single one of them is an unconditional beuuulievers in the Glaciationzzzz and in other Lyell 's imbecilities !!! ... and I bet my bottom dollar on that indeed The drama further is that poor fraudulent sci000nce of Gogology ( not to be confused with the True Geology) is riddled with such fools and unlearnt Universilities mind programmed idiots ! Just admire that other hypothesis advanced by that Antipodeans Sci000ntists which you will discover in the Quotation below : QUOTE It appears the unsuspecting creatures fell to their deaths through pipes in the dusty plain surface that periodically opened and closed over millennia. UNQUOTE This is the purer unsaturated sample of Goodish - Ghoulish - Gibberish Sci000ncitfic hypothesis to which I have come across !!! I have a simple question then : ARE THOSE NUTS PAID FOR SPOUTING FORTH THEIR UTTER NONSENSE ? Hey ? PATHETIC Sir Jean-Paul Turcaud Exploration Geologist & Offshore Consultant Mobile +33 650 171 464 Australia Mining Pioneer Founder of the True Geology http://www.tnet.com.au/~warrigal/grule.html http://users.indigo.net.au/don/tel/index.html http://members.iimetro.com.au/~hubbca/turcaud.htm http://www.abc.net.au/rn/talks/bbing/stories/s28534.htm QUOTE of the article now, which appeared as well in THE AUSTRALIAN **************************** CAVERNS GIVE UP HUGE FOSSIL HAUL George De : "George" Date : Wed, 24 Jan 2007 22:33:20 -0500 Local : Jeu 25 jan 2007 04:33 Objet : Caverns give up huge fossil haul http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/6296029.stm An astonishing collection of fossil animals from southern Australia is reported by scientists. The creatures were found in limestone caves under Nullarbor Plain and date from about 400,000-800,000 years ago. The palaeontological "treasure trove" includes 23 kangaroo species, eight of which are entirely new to science. Researchers tell Nature magazine that the caves also yielded a complete specimen of Thylacoleo carnifex, an extinct marsupial lion. It appears the unsuspecting creatures fell to their deaths through pipes in the dusty plain surface that periodically opened and closed over millennia. Most of the animals were killed instantly but others initially survived the 20m drop only to crawl off into rock piles to die from their injuries or from thirst and starvation. The preservation of many of the specimens was remarkable, said the Nature paper's lead author, Dr Gavin Prideaux. All shapes "To drop down into these caves and see the Thylacoleo lying there just as it had died really took my breath away," the Western Australian Museum researcher told the BBC's Science In Action Programme. Sitting in the darkness next to this skeleton, you really got the sense of the animal collapsing in a heap and taking its last breath. It was quite poignant. "Everywhere we looked around the boulder piles, we found more and more skeletons of a very wide array of creatures." In total, 69 vertebrate species have been identified in three chambers the scientists now call the Thylacoleo Caves. These include mammals, birds and reptiles. The kangaroos range from rat-sized animals to 3m (nearly 10ft) giants. The team even found an unusual wallaby with large brow ridges. "When we first glanced at the animal, we thought they were horns; but on closer inspection we realised they must have performed some sort of protective function," Dr Prideaux explained. "The beast must have been sticking its head into spiny bushes and browsing on leaves." The 'Ancient Dry' The scientists' investigations indicate the ancient Nullarbor environment was very similar to that of today - an arid landscape that received little more than 200mm of rainfall a year. What has changed significantly is the vegetation. Whereas the Thylacoleo Caves' animals would have seen trees on the plain, the modern landscape is covered in a fire-resistant chenopod shrub. This observation goes to the heart of a key debate in Australian palaeontology, the team believes. The continent was once home to a remarkable and distinctive collection of giant beasts. These megafauna, as researchers like to call them, included an immense wombat-like animal (Diprotodon optatum) and a 400kg lizard (Megalania prisca). But all - including the marsupial lion - had disappeared by the end of the Pleistocene Epoch (11,500 years ago). Some scientists think the significant driver behind these extinctions was climate change - large shifts in temperature and precipitation. But Dr Prideaux and colleagues argue the Thylacoleo Caves' animals give the lie to this explanation because they were already living in an extremely testing environment. "Because these animals were so well adapted to dry conditions, to say that climate knocked them out just isn't adequate. These animals survived the very worst nature could throw at them, and they came through it," co-author Professor Bert Roberts told BBC News. "If you look at the last four or five glacial cycles, where the ice ages come and go, the animals certainly suffered but they didn't go extinct - they suffered but survived," the University of Wollongong scientist said. This assessment would be consistent with the other favoured extinction theory - extermination by humans, either directly by hunting or indirectly by changing the landscape through burning. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Take the silly ass foam off the tank and wrap the ET in a huge mylar balloon, go to your local hobby shop and as for mylar, take what they give you and build a huge balloon out of it to put the ET in, fill it with helium, when it gets hot, the thin s | Craig Fink | Space Shuttle | 0 | April 29th 05 04:37 AM |
Fossil Beds on Mars! | forthfreak | Astronomy Misc | 11 | February 12th 05 06:41 AM |
Fossil Beds on Mars! | forthfreak | Policy | 11 | February 12th 05 06:41 AM |
Martian fossil????? | Darren Drake | Amateur Astronomy | 7 | March 11th 04 10:12 PM |
If MER happened to focus in on a fossil... | RDG | History | 6 | February 24th 04 04:21 AM |