Page 45 - A Historical Lie: The Stone Age
P. 45
HARUN YAHYA
Next we see the family arriving and settling into their new home. A
fire is lit either from some embers carefully nursed and brought from
the old home, or else by means of a simple, wooden fire drill. (We can-
not say for certain what methods Stone Age man used for obtaining
fire, but we do know that from a very early period he did make use of
fire, for hearths are a common feature in almost any occupation level
in caves and rock-shelters.)
Probably some of the family then go off to collect grass or bracken to
make rough beds upon which they will sleep, while others break
branches from bushes and trees in the near-by thicket and construct a
rude wall across the front of the shelter. The skins of various wild ani-
mals are then unrolled and deposited in the new home, together with
such household goods as they possess.
And now the family is fully settled in, and the day-to-day routine is re-
sumed once more. The men hunt and
trap animals for food, the
women probably help in
A scientist evaluating evidence with
evolutionist prejudices may make
many interpretations about the rele-
vant period. But for these interpreta-
tions to be accepted, they must be
supported by clear findings and data.
So far, evolutionists have found no
evidence to support their myths of
half-human and half-ape creatures
that communicated by grunting, lived
in caves, sat around fires wearing furs
and hunted with primitive weapons.
These are only figments of the evolu-
tionist imagination. Science shows
that human beings have always been
fully human.
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