between humans and their remote ancestors?
Anthropologists insist humans have evolved on Earth by means of Darwinian gradualism, starting at 4.0 million years ago with a group of upright-walking primates known as “Australopithecines,” who evolved over the course of 2.0 million years into the early Homos (in scientific terms “Homo” means “man”). There are eight or ten or twelve groups of these so-called “prehuman” creatures, depending on which anthropologist you consult; but whether eight or twelve, they all lead inexorably to modern humans. The only problem is that not a single human bone, or even a remotely human bone, is in the entire “prehuman” fossil record until the Cro-Magnons (essentially modern humans) appear quite suddenly at only 120,000 years ago. This simply flies in the face of Darwinian gradualism, and creates a need for what has come to be called “the missing link.” The missing link is any bone dated prior to the Cro-Magnons which will in any way indicate that a transition is underway from the so-called “prehuman