just had the rspca at my door asking about a cat with matted fur, they probably had the wrong address but my mind cant help but wonder if someone tried to report my cat to the rspca, but given that the cat was supposed to be brown and called gizmo it probably was just a mistake.
2015: glitch that basically let people fuck with post formatting and everything looked like this
2018: staff ignored the spambot problem for like years at this point and the app was removed from the app store as a result of the site being absolutely fucking laden with spambots, which finally motivated them to do something about it, resulting in a hastily made protocol to detect bots utterly failing and deleting half of the sites userbase
i got my binder and holy shit i love it, its so comfortable and just feels so good, may have to get a second one at some point š
GuEss wHO cHanGEd tHEir wiLliAM agaiN?? It waS me!!
Idk it seems like everytime I draw him itās different?? But I try to draw him the same way, but yeaahhh!! I changed his hair color and style for the 90th time, and his eye color is blue aGAiN- TuT"
Edit: I just realized how uneven his legs are jsSJHDHSYEUSJFH-
Why there is so much hate on straight people⦠Like, dang
I get that LGBT+ people also get hate but donāt be a hypocrites
Letās just donāt be an assholes to each other
Straights must die
Maybe itās from the
*adjusts microphone*
MEDIA
that ceaselessly portray family as this post-simpsonian hell where frumpy, stupid but endearing husband dreads the wife and the wife is just a neurotic nag bag
lesbians be like *70% of us commit domestic abuse* haha i love my partner
This is my mastersā degree in anthropology. Iād show you my BA, but itās at my parentsā house. Iām three and a half years into a PhD in physical anthropology. Iāve been employed to do physical anthropology at one of the worldās best natural history museums. My area of study? Teeth and diets.Ā Iām not here to argue veganism or vegetarianism, Iām here to tell you, point by point, why youāre devastatingly misinformed about our place in the primate family tree, along with my peer-reviewed sources behind the jump. I know we live in a āpost-truthā society so maybe being presented with the overwhelming consensus of the scientists who currently work with this material is meaningless to you, and honestly, this probably isnāt going to make a bit of difference for you, but I canāt let this slide. Not in this house built on blood and honor. And teeth. Ā
1.Ā The evidence for being closely related to chimpanzees is vast and well-understood thanks to advances in DNA analysis.Ā We share a huge amount of DNA with them, and not just repeating patterns in non-coding DNA. We have numerous genes that are identical and likely diverged around 7 million years ago, when Sahelanthropus tschadensis was roaming the earth. S. tschadensis was a woodland species with basal ape and basal human-line traits. The most notable was the positioning of the foramen magnum towards the central base of the skull and not emerging from the back suggests bipedality. This, along with other traits such as small canines worn at the tip, which implies a reduced or absent C/P3 honing complex (the diastema), suggests that this is actually a basal trait and the pronounced diastema we see in other species was a trait that came later. But more on that later- back to chimps and what we mean by sharing DNA. Our chromosomes and chimp chromosomes are structured far more like each other than other mammals. Furthermore, the genes located on these chromosomes are very similar. Chromosome 2, for instance, is nearly identical to two chimpanzee chromosomes. (Chromosome 2 in humans, Neanderthals, and Denisovans is different from Chromosome 2 found in apes and is actually the remnant of an ancient mutation where Chromosome 2 and 3 merged- you can see that from its vestigial centromeres and the genes found on it. We canāt get DNA from fossil material, but Neanderthal and Denisovan subfossils have demonstrated that this reduced chromosome count- we have one fewer pair than apes- is a typical trait of the Homo genus). Hereās a side by side comparison of Human and chimpanzee chromosomes.Ā
Gene coding regions are colored- bands at the same place mean that thereās two identical genes at that locus. Our similarities to lemurs, on the other hand, arenāt on homologous chromosomes. We have similar coding around the centromeres but the genes express themselves differently. The structure of non-ape primate genes is also significantly different; when the first chromosomal comparisons were done between humans and lemurs back in the 1990s, it was discovered that lemurs have much more highly-concentrated heterochromatin at their centromeres, whereas the structure of human and chimpanzee centromeres is similar. The major differences in chimp and human DNA are in the noncoding regions; most of our genes have identical structures.Ā
2. Ā All primates evolved from a lemur-like organism, not just humans. Hereās one of them. Iāve seen her in person. Pretty cool, huh?
Her name is Ida and sheās a member of the genus Darwinius. But thatās just like saying all primates evolved from something that was basically a tree shrew- which is also true. See, one of the main points of evolution is that organisms are continually changing throughout time. We didnāt jump from lemur-like organism to human; changes were slow and gradual and the lineage isnāt really a straight tree. The fossil species we have and know lead to different lines branching out. Some things died off, some things flourished. Heck, look at the Miocene- twelve million years ago, there were hundreds of ape species. Now thereās twenty-three. (Sixteen gibbons, two chimp species, two gorilla species, two orangutan species, and one human species. Thereās also some subspecies of gorilla and gibbon, but Iām only counting the primary species.) Itās hard to trace things back, but saying that we evolved from lemur-like species is obtuse and obfuscates the real point, which is that HomoĀ and PanĀ descended from a relatively recent-in-the-grand-scheme-of-things common ancestor.Ā
3. Our dentition is unique to the extant primates, but not australopithecines. Our teeth look very much like other members of the genus Homo, the extinct ones, as well as many of the australopithecines. We also have very similar enamel proportions to gracile australopithecines; apes have much thinner enamel overall.
But what did australopithecines eat?
Everything. We know they were eating fruits and nuts based on microwear analysis and strontium analysis, but we also know they were eating meat- and in pretty decent quantity, too. Weāve found all kinds of butchering sites dating back millions of years and in association with Australopithecus garhi, the earliest tool user, but we can also see this in tapeworm evolution. Thereās many, many species of tapeworm in several genera. ButĀ three of them, in the genus Taenia, are only found in humans. And these species diverged from⦠carnivore tapeworms. Their closest relatives infect African carnivores like hyenas and wild dogs.Ā
Tapeworms that are adapted to the specific gut of their host species need a certain environment, as well as a specific cycle of infection so that it can reproduce. A tapeworm that infects hyenas is going to be less successful if it somehow makes the jump to a horse. But if the hyena tapeworm was able to adapt to our gut, that suggests that our stomach was hospitable enough for them chemically to survive- which brings me to the intestines.
4. Our intestines are also unique. Yes, we have longer intestines than carnivores, but we also donāt have cecums like herbivores. We are omnivores and that means we still needed to retain the ability to digest plants.Ā
The key to being omnivores is omni. All. Iām not saying we should only be eating meat, Iām saying our ancestors ate a varied diet that included all kinds of things. If we werenāt omnivores, why would we have lost the cecumās function? Why is the human appendix only a reservoir for the lymphatic system, as it is in carnivores? The cecum is an extremely important organ in herbivores, as it houses the bacteria needed to break down cellulose and fully utilize fiber from leaves. But we donāt have that. Instead, we compensate with a long gut. Our ancestors absolutely did eat fruits and nuts and berries, but they also ate other stuff. Like scavenged carcasses and bugs and probably anything they could fit in their mouths. Which- actually, primate mouths are interesting. Humans and chimpanzees have enclosed oral cavities, thick tongues, and jaw angles much more like herbivores than carnivores- suggesting a herbivorous ancestor. Thatās not something Iām arguing against at all. But again, we have adaptations for eating meat and processing animal protein because we are an extremely opportunistic species.Ā
5.Ā Our canines are true canines. First, semantics: having a diastema does not canine teeth make. We refer to the canine teeth by position- even herbivores, like horses, have them. Theyāre the teeth that come right after the incisors.Ā All heterodonts have the potential same basic tooth types- incisors, canines, premolars, molars- in various combinations and arrangements. Some species donāt have one type of teeth, others donāt have any- but itās silly to say that the canine teeth arenāt canine teeth just because they donāt serve the same function as a gorillaās or a bearās or some other animalās. Itās basic derived versus primitive characteristics.Ā
Now that weāve got semantics out of the way, letās talk about that diastema. The lost diastema is a derivedĀ trait, which means that our ancestors had it and we lost it over time. All other extant non-HomoĀ primates have a canine diastema. All of them.Ā However, when you look at australopithecines, we see that many of them either donāt have it or have it in a reduced capacity. At the earliest known hominin site, Lukeino, we see Orrorin tugenensisĀ with reduced canines compared to ape fossils and modern apes- and⦠you do know that apes donāt use their canines for eating meat, right? Like, primate canines serve a very different purpose than carnivoransā canines. Itās suggested that the large canines are for social display moreso than anything dietary- bigger, more threatening teeth are useful if youāre a gorilla or chimpanzee fighting to the top of your groupās social structure.Ā
Iām going to refer you to a blog post written by Dr. John Hawks, a good friend of my advisor and generally a pretty cool guy. Heās got a nice writeup on the evolution of hominin teeth and how the human lineās teeth have changed through time.Ā
Also, of courseĀ our teeth are going to be smaller. When we compare archaic Homo sapiensĀ fossils to modern skeletons, their teeth and jaws are much more robust. This is likely related to the introduction of soft foods- and by soft, I mean cooked grain mush- to the diet around the time of domestication, right before the population explosion that happened about 10k years ago. In general, post-domestication human jaws are much smaller and more crowded than any other humans and hominins that came before.
6:Ā Neanderthals didĀ die out, but not in a catastrophic event like we think of with dinosaurs. While there are no living Neanderthals today that we would classify as Homo neanderthalensis, there is plentyĀ of evidence that we interbred and likely outcompeted them as a species due to our overwhelmingly large population size (hypothesized based on number and locations of remains found). While thereās only a small percentage of Neanderthal mitochondrial DNA lines in human populations today, itās quite likely we lost a lot of that due to genetic drift and population migration- Neanderthals, after all, had a much more limited range than Homo sapiens sapiens. Their eventual extinction is a mosaic of events- outcompetition plus assimilation. The line between Homo sapiens sapiensĀ and Homo neanderthalensis/Homo sapiens neanderthalensisĀ is blurry- thereās some physical anthropologists who actually think we should be including them within our species as a subspecies- but they areĀ extinct in that the specific subset of hominins with distinct karyotypes and potential phenotypes no longer exists.