nanoboy
Well-Known Member
I think the article's title is misleading, given that the researchers specifically said:
“We don’t claim the dingo and changes in stone tool technologies came with these migrants. We suggest that maybe they accompanied the people.”
That whole "maybe" word is something that I use casually on this forum when talking about aliens and Antarctic colonies, but if I were a serious scientist I would never use it so flippantly like these guys. Still, it is an intriguing theory, if not a new one.
Study links ancient Indian visitors to Australia's first dingoes
“We don’t claim the dingo and changes in stone tool technologies came with these migrants. We suggest that maybe they accompanied the people.”
That whole "maybe" word is something that I use casually on this forum when talking about aliens and Antarctic colonies, but if I were a serious scientist I would never use it so flippantly like these guys. Still, it is an intriguing theory, if not a new one.
Study links ancient Indian visitors to Australia's first dingoes