View Full Version : Animals using tools
joegrundman
01-22-09, 08:56 PM
check out some of these. Especially the chimps attacking the fake leopard. Amazing!
http://blog.wired.com/wiredscience/2009/01/animaltools.html
Pfft! That's nothing.
I'm an animal and I can use much better tools.
joegrundman
01-22-09, 09:09 PM
good for you, i suppose
Damm right!
Those mole rats have got NOTHING on me and I will say it to their face any day.
nikimcbee
01-22-09, 09:14 PM
There was a science tv show talking about the difference between a human brain and a chimp brain. It was amazing how well the chimp could remember things and do math!:o (People flunked the same test, or I should say, did not score as highly).
So why are we running the world and chimps aren't. Chimps don't share/ pass on knowledge.
i wish I could remember the name of the show, it might have been Nova.
SUBMAN1
01-22-09, 10:24 PM
Pfft! That's nothing.
I'm an animal and I can use much better tools.
Plenty of proof here in this forum, so I'd have to agree. :D :p
-S
Stealth Hunter
01-22-09, 11:19 PM
I wonder, with their current course of evolution taken into account, what chimps will be like in ten thousand years...:hmm:
I wonder, with their current course of evolution taken into account, what chimps will be like in ten thousand years...:hmm:
Don't assume that they will evolve to be more intelligent.
If their environment does not change, they won't change at all. If they can manage to
reproduce with a smaller brain, they will.
Even if they did start to become more intelligent, it would take closer to 10 million
years, rather than 10 thousand for they to get up to our level.
joegrundman
01-22-09, 11:56 PM
I reckon they'll be able to spam internet forums with junkmail within a decade:p
I think more interesting is that the use of clubs and stones really gives a glimpse of what the early human ancestors might have been like at the very beginning of the tool using era
Edited to account for Uslcl's splendid observation!
UnderseaLcpl
01-23-09, 12:00 AM
I think more interesting is that the use of clubs and stones really gives a glimpse of what the bearly human ancestors might have been like at the very beginning of the tool using era
I agree, that would be beary interesting.:D ;)
Onkel Neal
01-23-09, 01:15 AM
You shoulda seen me last week replacing the O2 sensor on my truck...way down behind the engine. I was going ape. :doh:
breadcatcher101
01-23-09, 01:21 AM
I once saw a great blue heron using a feather to attract fish. At first I thought it had shed and floated at random but as the breeze slowly keep it drifting away he would pick it up and put it back into position. He caught 5 in this way before getting full and flying off. I kept the feather and made a fly out of it, keeping it's record going.
Stealth Hunter
01-23-09, 02:02 AM
I wonder, with their current course of evolution taken into account, what chimps will be like in ten thousand years...:hmm:
Don't assume that they will evolve to be more intelligent. If their environment does not change, they won't change at all. If they can manage to
reproduce with a smaller brain, they will.
Which is precisely why I said . . . with their current course of evolution taken into account . . .:up:
Even if they did start to become more intelligent, it would take closer to 10 million
years, rather than 10 thousand for they to get up to our level.
I don't expect them to arise to our level of intelligence in just ten thousand years. Still, it would be a curious thing to see how much they would change in the said amount of time.
Quillan
01-23-09, 11:19 AM
The thread title made me think of this:
http://www.larryjzimmerman.com/prehistory/ctools.jpg
Damm right!
Those mole rats have got NOTHING on me and I will say it to their face any day.
Don't be a mole hateah...
A Very Super Market
01-23-09, 05:24 PM
Not really. Chimps won't evolve if they don't need to, and they certainly aren't needing it now. Humans won't truly begin the road to a new species because we aren't in a life-or-death scenario (Ignore global warming, don't won't to start a flame war). Handicapped people aren't dying off like if we were living in the wild, but don't take it like I'm supporting eugenics. Chimps aren't really evolving either, since poaching will kill any member of a species, regardless of their genes. Chimps aren't specialist creatures though, they could feasibly survive on the outskirts of a forest, and maybe take to the plains like we did.
FIREWALL
01-23-09, 05:29 PM
Hell !!! Look how many of you can use a computer. :p :rotfl:
Task Force
01-23-09, 07:48 PM
errrrr..... I can uses a computr.:rotfl: Whts this buttun do. (explotion in background.):o:lol:
I once saw a great blue heron using a feather to attract fish. At first I thought it had shed and floated at random but as the breeze slowly keep it drifting away he would pick it up and put it back into position. He caught 5 in this way before getting full and flying off. I kept the feather and made a fly out of it, keeping it's record going.
What kind of fly did you use it for?
breadcatcher101
01-24-09, 07:38 PM
Your name tells all, a fishing fly of course.
FIREWALL
01-24-09, 11:01 PM
Sounds like another fishy story to me. :lol:
breadcatcher101
01-24-09, 11:22 PM
How about one that uses bread for bait?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UNTw7GH325U
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