Page 110 - The Evolution Deceit
P. 110

108                   THE EVOLUTION DECEIT






                        The Result of the Analysis of the Inner Ear:
                    THERE WAS NO TRANSITION FROM APE TO MAN



                                                     A comparative analysis of
                                                     the semi-circular canals in
                                                     the inner ear in both humans
                                                     and apes shows that the fos-
                                                     sils long portrayed as the
                                                     forerunners of human be-
                                                     ings were all in fact ordinary
                                                     apes. The species Australop-
                                                     ithecus and Homo habilis
                                                     had the inner ear canals of
                                                     an ape, while Homo erectus
                                                     had human ones.















            ments, which may have been deliberate. Professor Tim Bromage, who con-
            ducts studies on human facial anatomy, brought this to light by the help of
            computer simulations in 1992:
                 When it [KNM-ER 1470] was first reconstructed, the face was fitted to the
                 cranium in an almost vertical position, much like the flat faces of modern hu-
                 mans. But recent studies of anatomical relationships show that in life the face
                 must have jutted out considerably, creating an ape-like aspect, rather like the
                 faces of Australopithecus. 77
                 The evolutionist paleoanthropologist J. E. Cronin states the following
            on the matter:
                 ... its relatively robustly constructed face, flattish naso-alveolar clivus, (recall-
                 ing australopithecine dished faces), low maximum cranial width (on the tem-
                 porals), strong canine juga and large molars (as indicated by remaining
                 roots) are all relatively primitive traits which ally the specimen with mem-
                 bers of the taxon A. africanus. 78
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