
Here she is on top of lovely Black Butte in Sisters, Oregon. I think those are the Three Sisters in the background. The caterpillar is, of course, Neanderthal jewelry, sort of like an ear cuff.
Here she is on top of lovely Black Butte in Sisters, Oregon. I think those are the Three Sisters in the background. The caterpillar is, of course, Neanderthal jewelry, sort of like an ear cuff.
LOL!
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All natural, organic ear cuffs 😀
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Her hair swept to the side gives her a dramatic presence, like something meaningful is going on, or about to.
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Well, I must confess, I did not personally go on this hike. But I imagine it was pretty windy up there. Wind always makes things look dramatic, annoying as it may be IRL.
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She sure is a lively one.
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Tool making was an integral part of our becoming human!
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Sharper stone edges, strangely a representative of sharper hominin brains, might have been a driving factor in the evolution of our genus!
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Tool sharpening and meat eating were typical part of the hominin adaptation! Evolutionarily speaking, we’re a butcher genus!
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Sharp-edged tools helped our genus eat meat and marrow – foods higher in protein, fat and calories in the savage savanna!
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Chimpanzees (tribe Hominini sharing with humans) crack nuts with stones and hunt small animals with tree branches!
Though tool making didn’t emerge only with our genus, only humans could use tools to make other tools like stone knives!
https://naturesalltheres.blogspot.com/2021/10/ancestors.html
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