Friday, February 13, 2026

Total Gym embraces your tree-living hominin ancestry from 3.5 million years ago! Australopithecus ancestors/habilis

 The new, exceptionally complete Homo habilis skeleton (specimen KNM-ER 64061) found in the Lake Turkana Basin of Kenya is dated to between 2.02 and 2.06 million years old. Discovered in the Koobi Fora Formation, this 2026-analyzed find provides the most complete postcranial remains of the species ever found, showing unexpectedly primitive, long arms  https://www.sciencealert.com/this-2-million-year-old-fossil-may-be-the-oldest-example-of-an-early-human

 

So far, only two cranial sections with associated dental remains have been found for Homo erectus and three for Homo habilis. Recent compelling evidence suggests that both species co-existed in eastern Africa between 2.2 and 1.8 million years ago. Plus, several other hominin species probably lived at this time and in the same region: P. boisei and H. rudolfensis.

People complain about having to unfold the TG each time they use it. Much better to keep it set up with a 3.25" wide resistance band and cables extended with gym hoop straps. Just add more 3.25" bands to get that X-3 experience for "bent rows" and "biceps" and "chest presses" and "squats." TG with 3.25" wide bands (four as max, two on each side) for serious squats.
I just got a better ankle strap (Nealfit) since the TG foot strap is a pain in more ways than one. I think TG plus four 3.25" wide bands plus cable extensions is way underrated. Skyler points out that it's only "user error" if people think they can't get enough resistance on the TG.
So having the TG unfolded and set up - I just tuck into a closet and then easily pull it out with the band left on. It slides on one corner on the carpet.
People complain about being upside down on the TG but I think mimicking our millions of years living in the trees is a good thing. A "jungle gym for adults" is how someone called my TG. Civilization has existed for 10,000 years but science has proved we lived in trees part of time back 2 million years ago. 
 
"2-million-year-old fossils, such as those from South Africa, show shoulder and hip structures suited for both arboreal, tree-swinging movement and terrestrial bipedalism....its arms and legs show it was far more comfortable swinging in the trees ...From a distance I’m not sure one would notice differences between sediba and human walking,... why was A. sediba, the most human-like of all australopiths, so well adapted to tree living? “This is the question we are struggling with right now,” says DeSilva.
 
 AI says:
  • It stood about 1.2 meters (3.9 ft) tall. It possessed a human-like hand and pelvis, suggesting bipedalism, but retained long arms and a small brain, indicating it still frequented trees.
  • Evolutionary Link: Initially, researchers suggested A. sediba was a direct ancestor of the Homo genus. However, subsequent studies and the earlier age of other Homo fossils have made this claim controversial, with some scientists arguing it is a sister species to A. africanus or a late-surviving, related species.
  • Significance: It serves as a vital bridge in understanding the transition from ape-like australopithecines to the early Homo species, highlighting how mosaic evolution created diverse early human relatives.
  •  we could not reject the hypothesis that A. sediba shares its closest phylogenetic affinities with the genus Homo. Therefore, based on currently available craniodental evidence, we conclude that A. sediba is plausibly the terminal end of a lineage that shared a common ancestor with the earliest representatives of Homo. 

     A. Sediba 2 million year old ancestor of Homo?

     We report the presence of Homo at 2.78 and 2.59 million years ago and Australopithecus at 2.63 million years ago. Although the Australopithecus specimens cannot yet be identified to species level, their morphology differs from A. afarensis and Australopithecus garhi. These specimens suggest that Australopithecus and early Homo co-existed as two non-robust lineages in the Afar Region before 2.5 million years ago, and that the hominin fossil record is more diverse than previously known. Accordingly, there were as many as four hominin lineages living in eastern Africa between 3.0 and 2.5 million years ago: early Homo1, Paranthropus2, A. garhi3, and the newly discovered Ledi-Geraru Australopithecus.

     Early homo discoveries - vid

     3.4 million year old Hominin? vid

     Australopithecus is a genus of early, bipedal hominins that lived in Africa approximately 4.18 to 2 million years ago. As direct ancestors or close relatives to the Homo genus, they are characterized by a mix of ape-like features (small brains, 400–500 cc) and human-like traits, such as bipedalism

     An opposable big toe like a thumb - to grasp trees

     https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zIZSyPMoHIU

     Australopithecus used and made stone tools just like Homo habilis....

    Minnie the Moocher in the Blues Brothers - the best song ever? Cab Calloway in 1980

     https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=250MMq0fTrU

     This song shows why the U.S. is so great - Cab Calloway leading the audience in call and response as a jazz blues scat number from the 1920s - he dances and the band is a mix of black and white musicians. The audience is a mix of black and white people. Everyone experiencing great joy from Cab Calloway being the black leader.

     In 1992 I traveled to Costa Rica for a semester studying conservation biology and sustainability. I was befriended by two females - an AFrican-American black young lady from Philly and a white European-American from Cleveland and me from Minneapolis, a white male. What was our common denominator for being friends? All three of us liked the blues as our favorite music. hahahaha.

    Thursday, February 12, 2026

    The Covert Netherworld: Alfred McCoy's 30 "Men on the Spot" counterintelligence imperial agents of the Cold War new book

     https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7-EdJ4YTAJM

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5-3HrEaLcPI 

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZK-fuMSbsyU 

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YL8waHLCifI 

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xwmGlMPsyIY 

     https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bf95GV2O7Hw

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XmORjYLcRNg

     

     

     

     

    Dr. Elaine Pagels: Jesus was not God, you may not even need Jesus: You can freelance

     https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YYUUx7wK0J4&t=1431s

     

    Is Nature really female? The vast majority of reproduction (Plants, bacteria and fungi) does not need males...

     

  • asexual reproduction allows for rapid expansion and survival without mates, notably in insects and various reptiles.
  • Plants/Microbes: If including plants and bacteria, the percentage of reproduction not needing males is extremely high, as many plants can reproduce clonally, and bacteria primarily reproduce asexually
  •  
    Based on ecological and botanical research, a vast majority of plants possess the capacity for clonal (vegetative) reproduction, with estimates suggesting that approximately
    80% of angiosperm species can reproduce in this manner.
  •   Clonal reproduction is more common in certain groups, with studies indicating that over 29% of herbaceous species are clonal, while roughly 5.8% of woody species are clonal,  
  • Clonal propagation occurs through various vegetative structures, including tubers, rhizomes, runners, andstolons.
  • Environmental Influence: Clonal reproduction is often favored over sexual reproduction in extreme or stable environments where sexual recruitment is difficult, with studies showing up to 89% of reproduction in certain arid, high-stress areas being clonal.
  • Agricultural Importance: A large number of crop plants are propagated exclusively or primarily through clonal methods (cuttings, grafting) to maintain specific genetic traits, with the USDA holding over 40,000 such accession
  •  Plants constitute the overwhelming majority of Earth's biomass, accounting for approximately 80% to 82.5% of the total (roughly 450 gigatons of carbon). Bacteria are the second largest component at about 13% to 15%, while fungi constitute roughly 2% of the total biomass.
  •  Together, these three groups make up over 97% of the total
    gigatons of carbon (Gt C) that represents all life on Earth. Other life forms, including animals and viruses, constitute the remaining small percentage.
  •  Angiosperms are the largest, most diverse group of land plants, comprising over 300,000 species of flowering, seed-bearing plants that produce fruit. These vascular plants, making up about 80% of all green plants, include almost all agricultural crops, trees, shrubs, and grasses, featuring a unique, protected, double-fertilized seed within a fruit... Clonal seeds only occur through a process called apomixis, which allows a plant to bypass meiosis and fertilization, resulting in an embryo that is genetically identical to the mother plan...
  •  
    early all angiosperms, including those that reproduce clonally, possess the genetic and structural capacity for double-fertilized seeds. Double fertilization—one sperm uniting with the egg, another with the central cell—is a defining characteristic of nearly all flowering plants, creating a zygote and a nutritive endosperm.
    • Dual Strategies: Many angiosperms are facultative apomicts, meaning they can switch between clonal reproduction (apomixis) and sexual reproduction.
  • Wednesday, February 11, 2026

    Earth is over 1.5 C above pre-industrial temps already but global warming IPCC math averages over 30 years so ignores the truth

     Zeke Hausfather, October 2023, said: "This month was, in my professional opinion as a climate scientist – absolutely gobsmackingly bananas. JRA-55 beat the prior monthly record by over 0.5C, and was around 1.8C warmer than preindustrial levels."

    https://arctic-news.blogspot.com/2026/02/horrific-temperature-anomalies-forecast-over-arctic-ocean.html 

     As illustrated by the Eliot Jacobson image below, which uses a 3-year running mean, the temperature has meanwhile crossed the 1.5°C threshold and reached 1.53°C even when using an 1850-1900 base. 

      a relatively small rise in average temperature can result in a lot more hot and extremely hot weather.

    As an example, land-only temperatures are rising faster than ocean temperatures. Since most people live on land, it's crucial to report the full temperature peaks on land, rather than the global average.

    Yet another way used to downplay the dangers is by averaging the temperature rise out over long periods of time.

     When using an even earlier baseline, i.e. 1750 or preindustrial, it could be 1.53°C warmer, as discussed in an earlier post.

     the IPCC appears to have arrived at its temperature rise estimate by using an extrapolation or near term predictions of future warming so that the level of anthropogenic warming is reported for a 30 year period centered on today.

     

     

    Tuesday, February 10, 2026

    The Penis Tires Quickly: How young female as the most powerful N/om lead original human culture

     https://vimeo.com/1161583108

     Is the opposite of war vitality? Thanatos - the death impulse - is consuming the earth through our species, generating ever more violent forms of attack and repression. But Thanatos' other face is Eros. Is the antidote for killing seeded at the heart of the urge to exterminate? What can egalitarian hunter-gatherers teach us about moral systems as bodies? Anthropologists have the capacity to reveal our species' ancient predisposition for embodied morality, our will to health: can we be heard?

    Corporeal morality is the antidote to war - Morna Finnegan and Ingrid Lewis 3/2/2026