You were searching for “evolution man lemur chart”… what is a lemur chart?? Or did you mean the animal… in which case that is a very odd search I think?
Evolution: Lemur to Man.
I think it’s a very odd claim, but that was the most recent “missing link news”.
I’d also like to see the chart which details this evolutionary path. It will eventually end in Africa where a chimpanzee became a human for the first time. Thus teaches evolutionary doctrine.
Oops … we need to change the old facts, and replace them with new facts.
(Evolution is all about the facts. But it never said that they were always “true facts”.)
A skull that rewrites the history of man
It has long been agreed that Africa was the sole cradle of human evolution. Then these bones were found in Georgia…
The conventional view of human evolution and how early man colonised the world has been ***thrown into doubt ***by a series of stunning palaeontological discoveries suggesting that Africa was not the sole cradle of humankind.
… The skulls, jawbones and fragments of limb bones suggest that our ancient human ancestors migrated out of Africa far earlier than previously thought and spent a long evolutionary interlude in Eurasia – **before moving back into Africa **to complete the story of man.
Professor Lordkipanidze raised the prospect that Homo erectus may have evolved in Eurasia from the more primitive-looking Dmanisi population and then migrated back to Africa to eventually give rise to our own species, Homo sapiens – modern man.
Chimpanzees couldn’t find enough food in the forest so they migrated to the African plains and turned into human beings (due to mutations and natural selection).
The revised version of this evolutionary tall-tale gives a more crystal-clear explanation:
Chimpanzees evolved in the plains of Eurasia because natural selection turned them into humans. Then, they moved to Africa because these humans wanted to live in the forest. Then, they moved out of the forest to get more food in the plains.
It all makes perfect sense! Just ask evolutionist David Lordkipanidze of the Georgia National Museum and he will make it all very certain (more certain than gravity):
“The question is whether Homo erectus originated in Africa or Eurasia, and if in Eurasia, did we have vice-versa migration?"
Most importantly, we can be sure that there ***is no reason to doubt ***the slightest thing about evolutionary theory.
It’s all very certain. We have all of the important facts. Sometimes, those facts need to be changed for different facts that will fit the theory better. In that case, we just get rid of other facts that don’t fit the theory.
That’s just how science works. Anyone who doubts it obviously knows nothing about evolution. Homo erectus evolved first in Africa – everybody knows that.