| Near-complete australopithecine fossil
found in South Africa
Newspapers around the globe have been
proclaiming the news of the recent fossil
find in a South African cave of a nearly complete Australopithecus
skeleton. Evolutionists are hailing the
find as an important step to understanding
the evolution of man, as this is supposed to be one of our earliest
ancestors. They claim that it lived approximately 3.2 to 3.6 million
years ago. This four-foot-tall 'hominid' supposedly both swung from
a tree and walked upright.
Evolutionists believe that somewhere
around five million years ago, or
longer, the ancestors to modern man
branched off from the apes and other primates.
Some claim the earliest is Australopithecus while others say that
Australopithecus was nothing more than an
ape, not related to humans at all.
In Marvin Lubenow's book, Bones of Contention, he clearly shows that
the australopithecine fossils are ape
fossils and not those of any human ancestor.
Dr Lubenow also furnishes this
explanation of the term 'hominid':
'The word is used by the evolutionist
community to mean "humans and their evolutionary
ancestors." It includes the genus Homo, the genus
Australopithecus, and all creatures in the
family Hominidae. As an
evolutionist term it is meaningless in a
creationist worldview. The
creationist counterpart would be the term
human. I use the term human to refer
to those who are descendants of Adam' (p. 12).
Therefore, the term 'hominid' is an
invalid and meaningless term. 'Human', would
include only members of the genus Homo, such as Homo erectus, Homo
sapiens neanderthalensis and Homo sapiens
sapiens, which Lubenow shows are all
modern humans. Starting from a Biblical framework, all these are descendants
of Adam, through Noah. All of the other so-called hominids, such
as the australopithecines, may be nothing more than extinct apes or
ape-like creatures.
The paleoanthropologist Dr Sigrid
Hartwig-Scherer, of the University of Munich, regards
australopithecines, modern apes and humans as separate basic types.
Anatomist Dr Charles Oxnard performed detailed analysis of different
bones of Australopithecus africanus and
concluded that it did not walk upright
in the human manner and was more d istinct from both humans and chimpanzees
than these are from each other.1 More recently, Oxnard made the following
comments about the australopithecines, including 'Lucy':
'It is now recognized widely that the
australopithecines are not
structurally closely similar to humans,
that they must have been living at
least in part in arboreal [tree]
environments, and that many of the later
specimens were contemporaneous [living at
the same time] or almost so with the
earlier members of the genus Homo.'2
Oxnard, an evolutionist, is one of
several experts who do not believe that
the australopithecines were on the human
line. For more information on
human origins, see Humans: image of God or
advanced apes?
The method used to date the fossil is
also questionable. It is a form of
paleomagnetism. Evolutionists measured the
magnetic orientation of certain minerals,
such as magnetite, found in the layers of rock and assigned particular
orientations to certain time periods. When they discover a fossil
such as this one from South Africa, they determine the direction of
the magnetic orientation of the minerals
from the surrounding rock and match
it to that which has already been assigned to a specific time period.
However, there is evidence that that the
magnetic field has reversed
extremely rapidly over periods of only a
few days, as shown by patterns in a
thin lava flow. This is documented from secular geophysical sources in
the article 'The earth's magnetic field:
evidence that the earth is young'
by Dr Jonathan Sarfati (Creation
20(2):15-17). See online article.
At this time, we would venture to say
that the fossil in question is
nothing more than another extinct ape that
has nothing to do with the
origin of man and that the dating method
used is highly questionable.
Indeed, young-earth creationists look
forward to the thorough examination
of this fossil find. Because it is
apparently fairly complete, it could
settle the irrelevancy of
australopithecines to human origins once and for
all. In particular, X-ray analysis of the
semicircular canals will probably
show that this specimen did not walk
upright like humans - just as has been shown
with Australopithecus africanus, Australopithecus robustus and Homo
habilis.3
References
1.C.E. Oxnard, Nature 258:389-395, 1975.
Return to text.
2.C.E. Oxnard, The Order of Man, Yale
University Press, New Haven, 1984.
Return to text.
3.F. Spoor, B. Wood and F. Zonneveld,
'Implications of early hominid
morphology for evolution of human bipedal
locomotion', Nature
369(6482):645-648, 1994. Return to text.
R. L. David Jolly
Manager, Information Department - Answers
in Genesis
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