Because it's a general discussion, not a research paper. Do you typically get requests to cite your sources in real life?
village604
You see, I'd have to care about others thinking I'm credible for that to matter.
They are only outliers if you're factoring in infant deaths, which you already said you weren't.
That still doesn't mean 30 was the maximum possible age for humans 30,000 years ago. The ratio of older to younger remains doesn't mean a whole lot unless you can prove death from old age.
It's not like we have a plethora of remains to draw these conclusions from.
That paper is garbage, then. People have been regularly living past 38 for thousands upon thousands of years.
And there's no "design" for biology.
It's really a shame that alcohol is the best social anxiety medication out there.
If someone asks nicely, I'll give them a source. But if the request is just "source?" they can look it up themselves.
I wouldn't trust strangers on the Internet to spoon feed me information, so the only time I ask for a source is if I'm unable to find one.
Shit, a large chunk of my knowledge was gained by searching for a source to prove people wrong.
Get yourself a vacuum sealer.
I had a rescue dog for a bit who looked a lot like that, but with slightly more German shepherd features.
She was an absolute nightmare. Severe separation anxiety, not at all house trained, and way too hyperactive to be in a rent house without a dog door.
Luckily for her and us, we found someone with 10 fenced in acres and a dog door who had recently lost a dog who looked just like her.
Those have cameras now. Walmart's will lock you out and call an employee over if it thinks you didn't scan something.
If you're the aggressor you really can't complain when the people you invaded bring the fight to you.
That's a crap excuse. Load the data into ram on startup or local storage on install.