NegusGlennDennis's photo
Tue 01/26/16 02:05 AM
Most definitely.!

NegusGlennDennis's photo
Tue 01/26/16 01:15 AM
Why do white girls date black men?

NegusGlennDennis's photo
Sun 01/24/16 09:23 PM
I just wanna meet someone with an awesome personality and great vibes that's all...

NegusGlennDennis's photo
Sun 01/24/16 09:17 PM
Anything that has to do with the media is biased

NegusGlennDennis's photo
Sun 01/24/16 03:19 PM
Oh ok

NegusGlennDennis's photo
Sun 01/24/16 03:03 PM
There's no more need to be said on this brother...I've said what I had to say and so have you...Now enjoy the rest of your day

NegusGlennDennis's photo
Sun 01/24/16 02:58 PM
There's nothing really to discuss...I mean cause at the end of the day we all have our opinions and right now I just don't wanna hear any lol...I was just mentioning her name Ms. Kim that's all...Now if you wanna talk about something pertaining to life then hey let's go for it...

NegusGlennDennis's photo
Sun 01/24/16 02:52 PM
Well ok Ms.Kim...If I decide to post these things 1000 times that's my business though...Its like telling someone not to use the light inside of their housesurprisedsurprisedsurprised

NegusGlennDennis's photo
Sun 01/24/16 02:45 PM
How about this being what I wanted to post nothing more because this is my page Love

NegusGlennDennis's photo
Sun 01/24/16 02:43 PM
Finally.!!! Someone that's willing to admit facts about history.!!

NegusGlennDennis's photo
Sun 01/24/16 02:35 PM
Everything that you've learned has been said or thought of by someone else before so what's your point again? I'll wait

NegusGlennDennis's photo
Sun 01/24/16 02:33 PM
What did u guys learn?

NegusGlennDennis's photo
Sun 01/24/16 02:21 PM
No justice No peace.!!

NegusGlennDennis's photo
Sun 01/24/16 01:51 PM
The information is there all you have to is look it up

NegusGlennDennis's photo
Sun 01/24/16 01:45 PM
I hope so too

NegusGlennDennis's photo
Sun 01/24/16 01:43 PM
I'm pretty sure that you know how to use google....There's any and everything online where u can look up...History repeats itself but never lies

NegusGlennDennis's photo
Sun 01/24/16 01:39 PM
Africa provides a comprehensive and contigious time line of human development going back at least 7 million years. Africa, which developed the world's oldest human civilization, gave humanity the use of fire a million and half to two million years ago. It is the home of the first tools, astronomy, jewelry, fishing, mathematics, crops, art, use of pigments, cutting and other pointed instruments and animal domestication. In short Africa gave the world human civilization.

Worlds first abacus found in African
Ishango Bone
World's First Abacus
Millions of years ago human life started in Africa, Australopithecus aphaeresis and Australopithecus africanus and Australopithecus robustus were all key rungs in the development of humanity. These fossils were found in East and South Africa (Azania). Some of the fossils may be as old as 5 million years. For example Australopithecus robustus fossils found in an East Turkana Kenya site were at least 4 million year old.

It is generally accepted that the Homo habilis were the first full fledge tool makingancestor of humans. The earliest archaeological evidence of toolmaking comes from the Koobi Fora section of East Turkana. These Homo habilis are believed to be at least 2.5 million years old. The name Homo habilis comes from the Leakeys. They found what they believed to be conclusive fossil evidence of the first humans in the Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania and gave these ancestors that name called Homo habilis.. The Olduvai Gorge Homo habilis existed at least a million and quarter years ago

More important than tool making in human evolution is the mastery of fire. Nearly 2 million years ago early East Africans had mastered the use of fire. This was a revolutionary step in the development of humanity. This critical innovation insured the survival and spread of the species around the planet. It gave us an advantage over animal predators such as the big cats, hyenas and allowed human settlements in less accommodating climates. These people have been named Homo erectus by archaeologists. It is generally accepted that the final leap from Homo erectus to Homo sapiens sapiens as having occurred in Africa over two hundreds thousand years ago.

The Encyclopedia of World History describes the use of mtDNA found in fossils as a means of revealing the processes involved in this final leap. (The acronym mtDNA stands for mitochondrial DNA*.)

Molecular biologists like Alan Wilson and Rebecca Cann have studied the human family tree using this form of DNA, which is inherited through the female line without being diluted with paternal DNA. Thus, they argue, it provides a unique tool for studying ancestral populations. They compared mtDNA from Africans, Asians, Europeans, and Southeast Asians and found that the differences between them were small. They formed two groups: one was the Africans, the other the remainder. Wilson and Cann concluded that all modern humans derive from a primordial African population, from which populations migrated to the rest of the Old World with little or no interbreeding with existing archaic human groups. By calculating the rate of mtDNA mutations, they argue that archaic Homo sapiens evolved from Homo erectus in Africa by about 200,000 years ago. Then Homo sapiens sapiens, anatomically modern humans, appeared some 140,000 years ago. Mitochondrial DNA is still controversial, but there is some archaeological evidence from Africa that supports the biologists' scenario. Highly varied, early Homo sapiens populations flourished in sub-Saharan Africa between 200,000 and 150,000 years ago, some of them displaying some anatomically modern features. At the Klasies River Caves on the Indian Ocean coast of South Africa, anatomically modern human remains date to between 125,000 and 95,000 years ago. They are associated with sophisticated, versatile tool kits that were, if anything, superior to those used by the Neanderthals in Europe at the time.

Many scientists believe that Homo sapiens sapiens, modern humans, did indeed evolve in tropical Africa sometime after 150,000 years ago, as the geneticists argue. Ecologist Robert Foley has theorized that modern humans evolved in a mosaic of constantly changing tropical environments, which tended to isolate evolving human populations for considerable periods of time. Some groups living in exceptionally rich areas may have developed unusual hunting and foraging skills, using a new technology so effective that they could prey on animals from a distance with finely made projectiles. With efficient technology, more planning, and better organization of both hunting and foraging, our ancestors could have reduced the risks of living in unpredictable environments in dramatic ways.



source: http://www.bartleby.com/67/24.html



*Mitochondrial is defined as: 1. A spherical or elongated organelle in the cytoplasm of nearly all eukaryotic cells, containing genetic material and many enzymes important for cell metabolism, including those responsible for the conversion of food to usable energy. It consists of two membranes: an outer smooth membrane and an inner membrane arranged to form cristae. 2. The cell organelle where much of cellular respiration takes place; the "power plant" of the cell. Mitochondria probably entered eukaryotes by an act of endosymbiosis, in which one simple cell was absorbed by another. Mitochondria contain their own DNA. It is by tracing the mitochondrial DNA, which individuals inherit only from their mothers, that genetic linkages are often traced (Sources: the Houghton Mifflin Company Medical and Science Dictionaries)

NegusGlennDennis's photo
Sun 01/24/16 01:39 PM
Africa provides a comprehensive and contigious time line of human development going back at least 7 million years. Africa, which developed the world's oldest human civilization, gave humanity the use of fire a million and half to two million years ago. It is the home of the first tools, astronomy, jewelry, fishing, mathematics, crops, art, use of pigments, cutting and other pointed instruments and animal domestication. In short Africa gave the world human civilization.

Worlds first abacus found in African
Ishango Bone
World's First Abacus
Millions of years ago human life started in Africa, Australopithecus aphaeresis and Australopithecus africanus and Australopithecus robustus were all key rungs in the development of humanity. These fossils were found in East and South Africa (Azania). Some of the fossils may be as old as 5 million years. For example Australopithecus robustus fossils found in an East Turkana Kenya site were at least 4 million year old.

It is generally accepted that the Homo habilis were the first full fledge tool makingancestor of humans. The earliest archaeological evidence of toolmaking comes from the Koobi Fora section of East Turkana. These Homo habilis are believed to be at least 2.5 million years old. The name Homo habilis comes from the Leakeys. They found what they believed to be conclusive fossil evidence of the first humans in the Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania and gave these ancestors that name called Homo habilis.. The Olduvai Gorge Homo habilis existed at least a million and quarter years ago

More important than tool making in human evolution is the mastery of fire. Nearly 2 million years ago early East Africans had mastered the use of fire. This was a revolutionary step in the development of humanity. This critical innovation insured the survival and spread of the species around the planet. It gave us an advantage over animal predators such as the big cats, hyenas and allowed human settlements in less accommodating climates. These people have been named Homo erectus by archaeologists. It is generally accepted that the final leap from Homo erectus to Homo sapiens sapiens as having occurred in Africa over two hundreds thousand years ago.

The Encyclopedia of World History describes the use of mtDNA found in fossils as a means of revealing the processes involved in this final leap. (The acronym mtDNA stands for mitochondrial DNA*.)

Molecular biologists like Alan Wilson and Rebecca Cann have studied the human family tree using this form of DNA, which is inherited through the female line without being diluted with paternal DNA. Thus, they argue, it provides a unique tool for studying ancestral populations. They compared mtDNA from Africans, Asians, Europeans, and Southeast Asians and found that the differences between them were small. They formed two groups: one was the Africans, the other the remainder. Wilson and Cann concluded that all modern humans derive from a primordial African population, from which populations migrated to the rest of the Old World with little or no interbreeding with existing archaic human groups. By calculating the rate of mtDNA mutations, they argue that archaic Homo sapiens evolved from Homo erectus in Africa by about 200,000 years ago. Then Homo sapiens sapiens, anatomically modern humans, appeared some 140,000 years ago. Mitochondrial DNA is still controversial, but there is some archaeological evidence from Africa that supports the biologists' scenario. Highly varied, early Homo sapiens populations flourished in sub-Saharan Africa between 200,000 and 150,000 years ago, some of them displaying some anatomically modern features. At the Klasies River Caves on the Indian Ocean coast of South Africa, anatomically modern human remains date to between 125,000 and 95,000 years ago. They are associated with sophisticated, versatile tool kits that were, if anything, superior to those used by the Neanderthals in Europe at the time.

Many scientists believe that Homo sapiens sapiens, modern humans, did indeed evolve in tropical Africa sometime after 150,000 years ago, as the geneticists argue. Ecologist Robert Foley has theorized that modern humans evolved in a mosaic of constantly changing tropical environments, which tended to isolate evolving human populations for considerable periods of time. Some groups living in exceptionally rich areas may have developed unusual hunting and foraging skills, using a new technology so effective that they could prey on animals from a distance with finely made projectiles. With efficient technology, more planning, and better organization of both hunting and foraging, our ancestors could have reduced the risks of living in unpredictable environments in dramatic ways.



source: http://www.bartleby.com/67/24.html



*Mitochondrial is defined as: 1. A spherical or elongated organelle in the cytoplasm of nearly all eukaryotic cells, containing genetic material and many enzymes important for cell metabolism, including those responsible for the conversion of food to usable energy. It consists of two membranes: an outer smooth membrane and an inner membrane arranged to form cristae. 2. The cell organelle where much of cellular respiration takes place; the "power plant" of the cell. Mitochondria probably entered eukaryotes by an act of endosymbiosis, in which one simple cell was absorbed by another. Mitochondria contain their own DNA. It is by tracing the mitochondrial DNA, which individuals inherit only from their mothers, that genetic linkages are often traced (Sources: the Houghton Mifflin Company Medical and Science Dictionaries)

NegusGlennDennis's photo
Sun 01/24/16 01:37 PM
Time Line: Complete Hominid Time Line found only in Africa. Chad 7 million years ago Ethiopia 5 million years ago South Africa 3.5 - 4 million years ago
. Oldest Stone Tools: dated back to 2.5 million years ago in Ethiopia and other parts of the Rift Valley
Domestic Use of Fire: 1.4 million years ago.
Oldest Fossils of Modern Man (Homosapiens, Sapiens) 195,000 years ago in Ethiopia
Oldest Example of Fishing - 110,000 years ago, N. E. Africa & South Africa
Oldest Use of Pigments, 150,000 years ago, Rift Valley & South Africa
Oldest Bone Tools, 90,000 years ago in South Africa
Oldest Barbed Points & Hook, 70-90,000 years ago, N.E. & South Africa
Oldest Jewelry Beads, 90,000 years ago, Central & South Africa
Oldest Homesite, 90,000 years ago, Sudan
Stargazing, 43,000 years ago, Nile Valley
Iron Ore Mining, 40,000 years ago
Oldest Known Mathematical Artifact, 37,000 years ago, Lebombo Bone, Swaziland
Oldest Example of Math Calculations, 27,000 years ago, Ishango Bone, Zaire
Oldest Rock Art (Apollo II Rock Shelter) Namibia, 28,000 years ago

Animal Domestication, 15,000 years ago, Ethiopia


Crop Cultivation, 18,000 years ago

NegusGlennDennis's photo
Sun 01/24/16 01:33 PM
You wanted research now read.!!

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