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rhodorhoades | 3 years ago
I think it goes back to the OP’s original point… there are some things we cannot ever know for sure but they are fun to learn and talk about.
rhodorhoades | 3 years ago
I think it goes back to the OP’s original point… there are some things we cannot ever know for sure but they are fun to learn and talk about.
ummonk|3 years ago
Maursault|3 years ago
What else but a population bottleneck could explain the lack of any genetic diversity to speak of in humans? No human alive today is more distantly related to you than 37th cousin. Any two random individuals are 99.9% identical. That's weird. For this to have occurred, something must have happened everywhere all at once.[1]
[1] https://https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toba_catastrophe_theor...
nomel|3 years ago
> It also shows that pockets of architectural knowledge rapidly advanced and then receded all across the known world.
as "individual pockets, all around the world, advanced and receded."
usrusr|3 years ago
That just means that this level of architectural capability is easily discovered from scratch when circumstances happen to be somewhat right, but then not enough of a gamechanger to endure when when they are not.