orogenicman
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Aug 20, 2010
- Messages
- 734
OR... the tiny sequence fragments have no significance at all. "Once upon a time... " ...in our recent history, Northern latitudes were experiencing severe cloud cover due to (much) warmer oceans than now. That's what deposited all the ice that made the (drum roll) Ice Age. You see, it's not really cold that's required so much as persistent precipitation. Anyhow, people living in those regions experienced severe vitamin D3 deficiency due to the decreased sunlight at the time in those regions. The heavy brows and oddly shaped limbs are a direct result of that very deficiency. Descriptions of that weather still exist in tribal memories--it wasn't really that long ago, as it happens.
The problem with your argument is that vitamin D deficiency looks nothing like what we see in Neanderthal skeletons, to say nothing of the fact that the ice ages weren't caused by persistent precipitation, but were caused by the milankovitch cycles. If the traits we see in Neanderthals were caused by a vitamin D deficiency due to an incipient ice age, why don't we see those same traits in Asians who were no less affected by the ice ages?