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View Full Version : Dolphins evolve opposable thumbs


Napsterbater
02-17-2008, 09:53 PM
We're really fucked now.

http://www.theonion.com/content/node/28315

Dolphins Evolve Opposable Thumbs
'Oh, Shit,' Says Humanity

HONOLULU–In an announcement with grave implications for the primacy of the species of man, marine biologists at the Hawaii Oceanographic Institute reported Monday that dolphins, or family Delphinidae, have evolved opposable thumbs on their pectoral fins.

"I believe I speak for the entire human race when I say, 'Holy fuck,'" said Oceanographic Institute director Dr. James Aoki, noting that the dolphin has a cranial capacity 40 percent greater than that of humans. "That's it for us monkeys."

Aoki strongly urged humans, especially those living near the sea, to learn to communicate using a system of clicks and whistles in a frequency range of 4 to 150 kHz. He also encouraged humans to "start practicing their echolocation as soon as possible."

Delphinologists have reported more than 7,000 cases of spontaneous opposable-digit manifestation in the past two weeks alone, with "thumbs" observed on the bottle-nosed dolphin, the Atlantic humpback dolphin, and even the rare Ganges River dolphin.

"It appears to be species-wide," said dolphin specialist Clifford Brees of the Kewalo Basin Marine Mammal Laboratory, speaking from the shark cage he welded shut around himself late Monday. "And it may be even worse: We haven't exactly been eager to check for thumbs on other marine mammals belonging to the order of cetaceans, such as the killer whale. Oh, Christ, we're really in the soup now."

Thus far, all the opposable digits encountered appear to be fully functional, making it possible for dolphins–believed to be capable of faster and more complex cogitation than man–to manipulate objects, fashion tools, and construct rudimentary pulley and lever systems.

"They really seem to be making up for lost time with this thumb thing," said Dr. Jim Kuczaj, a University of California–San Diego biologist who has studied the seasonal behavior of dolphins for more than 30 years. "Last Friday, a crude seaweed-and-shell abacus washed up on the beach near Hilo, Hawaii. The next day, a far more sophisticated abacus, fashioned from some unknown material and capable of calculating equations involving numbers of up to 16 digits, washed up on the same beach. The day after that, the beach was littered with thousands of what turned out to be coral-silicate and kelp-based biomicrocircuitry."

"My God," Kuczaj added. "What are they doing down there?"

It is unknown what precipitated the dolphins' sudden development of opposable thumbs. Some dolphin behaviorists believe that the gentle marine mammal, pushed to the brink by humanity's reckless pollution and exploitation of the sea, tapped into some previously unmined mental powers to spontaneously generate a thumb-like appendage. However, given that 95 percent of the world's dolphin experts have committed suicide since learning of the development, the full story may never be known.

"You must believe, sleek ocean masters, that many of us homo sapiens weep with shame and disgust over the degradation to which our species has subjected our All-Mother, the Great World-Sea," read the suicide note of Dr. Richard Morse, a Brisbane, Australia, delphinologist and regular contributor to Marine Mammal Science. "If you are reading this, I estimate that it is the day we know as August 31, 2000. Please be decent and kind masters to our poor ape-race. Oh, God, I'm so sorry about the tracking collars."

"Scientists once wondered whether dolphins, with their remarkably advanced social and language structures, are actually smarter than we are," said Aoki, ushering reporters out of the laboratory he claimed "will either be a smoking hole or a zoo exhibit in the coming Dolphin Age." "Well, we're not wondering anymore."

paulaorcas
02-17-2008, 10:00 PM
"A primitive axe crafted out of driftwood and shell that is believed to be the handiwork of dolphins"

haha that totally ruined it for me even though i already had my doubts.....comical.

DarkFantasy96
02-17-2008, 10:06 PM
'Oh, Shit,' Says Humanity
That line really cracked me up.

Napsterbater
02-17-2008, 10:07 PM
Goddamnit. No one will take me seriously anymore now that I have my new goofy-ass avatar.

paulaorcas
02-17-2008, 10:10 PM
Goddamnit. No one will take me seriously anymore now that I have my new goofy-ass avatar.
LOL.:flowers:

DarkFantasy96
02-17-2008, 10:14 PM
Goddamnit. No one will take me seriously anymore now that I have my new goofy-ass avatar.
Well considering that the first thing I noticed was that it was from The Onion....

BorgHunter
02-17-2008, 11:20 PM
Goddamnit. No one will take me seriously anymore now that I have my new goofy-ass avatar.
It looks like an Asian man from The Simpsons. I, for one, don't get it.

Napsterbater
02-18-2008, 12:10 AM
There, I changed it.

primitive man
02-18-2008, 09:29 AM
did you know they gossip?

even if they did evolve thunmb like things, to actually use them to hold an axe would take eons.

Frogger
02-18-2008, 01:31 PM
Goddamnit. No one will take me seriously anymore now that I have my new goofy-ass avatar.


No one took you seriously before you got the new, goofy-ass avatar, Nappy.:p

Napsterbater
02-18-2008, 03:03 PM
I was wondering who would post that first, Dharma, or Frogger. Evakian, you owe me ten bucks.

Evakian
02-18-2008, 08:19 PM
I was wondering who would post that first, Dharma, or Frogger. Evakian, you owe me ten bucks.
Dammit, my milk money!

http://modernfamily.ca/images_saddestboy/splash.jpg

mikezila
02-18-2008, 09:59 PM
i've heard it said that dolphins are the second smartest life form on Earth. considering they spend their lives frolicking in the surf, and humans scratch and saves for 50 weeks of the year so they can do that for the other 2 weeks, i wonder who is the smartest. it sure isn't us.:confused:

DarkFantasy96
02-18-2008, 10:03 PM
I think chimps and orangutans are smarter than dolphins... They can be taught to understand human speech and use sign language, so if chimps/orangutans had the physical capabilities for voice there's no doubt they could talk as well as a human.

mikezila
02-18-2008, 10:22 PM
I think chimps and orangutans are smarter than dolphins... They can be taught to understand human speech and use sign language, so if chimps/orangutans had the physical capabilities for voice there's no doubt they could talk as well as a human.
a 4 y/o human maybe? have you ever read what they sign?

BorgHunter
02-18-2008, 10:32 PM
i've heard it said that dolphins are the second smartest life form on Earth.
Of course they are. The smartest, of course, are mice.

Inviolable
02-19-2008, 08:57 AM
Of course they are. The smartest, of course, are mice.
42!

Swordlol
02-19-2008, 10:26 AM
Aoki strongly urged humans, especially those living near the sea, to learn to communicate using a system of clicks and whistles in a frequency range of 4 to 150 kHz. He also encouraged humans to "start practicing their echolocation as soon as possible."

Rolling of the floor laughing.

DarkFantasy96
02-19-2008, 03:31 PM
a 4 y/o human maybe? have you ever read what they sign?
Four year olds can talk just fine. They just don't understand certain words/concepts that they haven't experienced, and that comes with age.

I know what you're saying though... And yes, when you teach sign language to an adult ape they will be unable to grasp the grammar of it, and will sign things out of order. So everyone assumed that chimps, et. al., don't have grammaticality... Until someone raised a gorilla whose mother couldn't care for it from a VERY young age, teaching it to sign and understand English. That gorilla (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Koko_%28gorilla%29) was able to grasp grammar by the time it was an adult. She knows more than 1,000 signs and about 2,000 spoken words.

Here's a quote from Wikipedia (I bolded the part that I found most amazing... never knew that before):
Some scientists assert Koko's use of signs, and her actions consistent with her use of signs, indicate she has mastered the use of language[citation needed]. Others contend she does not understand the meaning behind what she is doing, but learns to complete the signs simply because the researchers reward her for doing so (indicating that her actions are the product of operant conditioning)[citation needed]. However, the latter position is not consistent with the observation that Koko uses the language freely and in novel ways, even when there is no foreseeable gratification[citation needed]. Another concern that has been raised about Koko's ability to express coherent thoughts through the use of signs is that interpretation of the gorilla's conversation is left to the handler, who may see improbable concatenations of signs as meaningful.

Dr. Patterson has documented Koko inventing new signs to communicate novel thoughts. For example, she asserts that nobody taught Koko the word for "ring", therefore to refer to it she combined the words "finger" and "bracelet", hence "finger-bracelet". Similarly, she invented "drink-fruit" (melon), "water-bird" (swan) and "animal-person" (gorilla).