Monday, September 22, 2008

Cro-Magnon Culture: Respect for the Dead

Cro-Magnon Culture: Respect for the Dead
When a Cro-Magnon died the body was not simply abandoned and left to rot in the open.

Even the Neanderthals seem to have had some concept that death was not the end, and that care must be taken of the body. The Cro-Magnons buried their dead in or near the caves and huts in which they lived.

Clearly they were anticipating a new life in the world beyond this one, because they were buried in their beaded clothes, along with their tools, weapons, jewelry and favorite possessions.

In many burials, red ochre has been found scattered over the corpse.

Possibly this was to give the deceased a more lifelike appearance, or else to represent birth blood, as the deceased was reborn, through Mother Earth, into eternal life.
Cro-Magnon Culture: Respect for the Dead

Sunday, September 7, 2008

Darwin and his Theory

Darwin and his Theory
Although the theory of evolution is commonly linked with Charles Darwin’s publication of The Origin of Species’ in 1859, many of his idea that Darwin put forth in his book had been discussed for at least a century.

In fact, Darwin’s grandfather, Erasmus Darwin, argued for evolutionary theory before Charles was even born. What The Origin of Species contributed to the theory was a clear statement of the process by which evolution occurs, which we call natural selection.

In 1831 Darwin set out on a round the world voyage on the ship H.M.S Beagle, serving as the ship’s naturalist. Over the next five years he made detailed observations of plants and animals, noting their similarities and differences and comparing them with fossils of extinct species.

From his study of the similarities among existing species around the world, together with the similarities between living and fossil species, he gradually came to the conclusion that some species were related to one another through common lines of descent, a view that clearly challenged the biblical notion of a single Creation of all the various life forms in the world.

It remained for Darwin to pull together loose ends of various theories of evolution that had been discussed in scientific circles for some time and to support his own version with evidence gathered during his voyage on the Beagle.
Darwin and his Theory

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