lordkalvan
Member
- Jul 9, 2008
- 2,195
- 0
Ummm, I don't know what road you are going down here, but I never suggested that the animal in question was a pronghorn antelope, a beast native to North America anyway. What I did point out was that the pronghorn was misidentified by European colonists as an antelope because it happens to look very much like Old World antelopes.pronghorn antelope
The antelope has very long, narrow legs, and a much leaner body than the image in question. The antelope's neck and head also extend above the body. The image from angkor wat shows a very stout beast with the head much shorter and at a lower neutral level. Granted it appears to be drinking or eating or -whatever- with it's head in a dipped position, it is certainly not long enough to be as an antelope. And once again LOOK AT THE TAIL.
The conventions I am familiar with view caps lock as intentionally shouting - i.e. to get the attention of the terminally ignorant. If you did not intend it as such, I am happy to take your word for it and withdraw the accusation. I only commented that you appeared to be lazy in respect of your apparent attitude towards replying to posts; how far this extends into your keyboard use, I have no idea .You interpret THIS AS SHOUTING, EH?
It is an emphasis. There is no such thing as tone on teh internetz [sic]. true I could use bold, but it is easier to kill the cap lock/shift key. After all I am "lazy" aren't I?
I made no such point. I simply mentioned that there is no evidence of stegosaurus being indigenous to south-east Asia and certainly none that it dwelt there 1,000 years ago. What guides your belief as to the Angkor Wat carving depicting 'a variant dinosaur either of the stegosaurid GENUS or a cousin thereof'? Can you point to any such 'variant' or 'cousin' displaying the cranial features that the carving does?Concerning your point that the stegosaurus indigenous to Colorado lacks horns, I already told you that I believed it was a variant dinosaur either of the stegosaurid GENUS or a cousin thereof. Notice how I said genus and not species? That is because stegosaurus is not any one dinosaur, but a family of them.
Nope, you simply claimed it was stegosaurus on the bais of some rather shaky 'looks like' observations.I did not say the angkor wat image was Stegosaurus armatus which is the north american variety
From observation, the genera of large animals seems to be limited to relatively few numbers. Speculating on the possible existence of 5,000+ stegosaurus species on the basis of the observation that there are thousands of different frog species seems an unconvincing argument.There are over 5,000 species of frogs in the world not counting the projected thousands of unknown species of all kinds of wildlife the globe over. Do you really think that the stegosurid family is any different?
As there are around 3,000 'full' dinosaur specimens - complete or near-complete skeletons or complete or near-complete skulls - in US museums alone (source: Will we ever run out of dinosaur bones? - By Kim Gittleson - Slate Magazine), I don't know where your figure of 1,200 comes from. That aside, I do not see how this point does anything to add conviction to the conclusion that the Angkor Wat carving represents a stegosaurus (the forelimbs are all wrong as well).I have read that there have been approximately 1,200 dinosaur skeletons found thus far in the world --of all the various genera and species-- not to mention just how many of those are even near "complete". One of the stegosaurus species, madagascariensis is named from the grand discovery of teeth ---nothing else is found of this species of stegosaurus.
So, if only about 1,200 dinosaurs have been uncovered the world over, what makes you think that the handful of stegosurids found are the entirety of their kind, and what makes you think that they represent a significant proportion of the whole of dinosaurs found?
I don't know what point you are making here. Dinosaur fossils are comparatively rare because the circumstances under which fossilization occurs are comparatively rare and geological processes mean that fossil-bearing strata are being continually disrupted.If dinosaurs died millions of years ago, it is a miracle that we even have the precious few that we do. You act as if our paleontological finds are holistic of time immemorial.
No, I am saying that such speculation is quite without foundation and you may as well speculate that the carving represents some unknown variety of any animal that you care to imagine it does.You saying that no variation of the stegosaurus could possibly have horns is like saying that species are never adorned with unique features which distinguish them from the rest of their genus.
I hope I would refrain from reaching a dogmatic conclusion on the basis of incomplete information. Regarding your last point, as no primate I know of has multiple rows of teeth in its jaw, I would immediately doubt that I was being shown a photograph of hominid teeth.The Pacu ---Would it have ever crossed your mind that this grill came from a fish if I cropped away the rest of the image? I was tempted to try it. Something tells me that if the Pacu was long extinct and these teeth were discovered in some layer of strata, they would be evidence for some sort of early hominid.
Speculation is cheap and easy. Why can't one of the stegosaurus species have come with opposable thumbs on its forelimbs? If you want to allow evidence-free speculation as supporting argument for your conclusions, then feel free to do so, but this does not amount to a very rigorous approach to identifying the animal in the carving as the type you appear to wish very much for it to be.Consider also the extinct three-toed horse species. If that variety of horse could have three toes and not a single hoof as the living species have, why can't one of the stegosaurus species come with horns?
And after your first three, all the dogs you name are sub-species of the gray wolf and the result of deliberate breeding for preferred traits by human beings. Wolves, coyotes and foxes display none of the dramatic differences that you can demonstrate by choosing your examples as carefully as you do here. Again, if you want to argue that the Angkor Wat carving represents an as yet unknown species of stefosaurus, you need to provide something in the way of evidence that such an animal either could or did exist. Absent such evidence, you appear to be just speculating in the absence of facts in order to explain away features of the carving that are demonstrably different from those of any known stegosaurus species and, strangely, quite typical of animals that are known to have been indigenous to the region at the time the carving was supposedly made.I refer you once more to consider the various kinds of dogs. Wolves, coyotes, foxes, chiuauas, beagles, pitt-bulls, bull dogs, poodles, "weiner dogs", shi-tzus, great dames, german shepherds, saint bernards, and so on..... All of the various sizes and fur types and skeletal structures... Think about the ears of a beagle or a besset hound and then think about the ears of a pitt-bull. Think about the fur of a chiuaua and then the fur of the old english sheepdog or the shi -tzu. These are variations within a genus.