Originally posted by Knight
Notto, I didn’t say we had NEVER found animal bones in human settlements, I said we hadn’t found that many TYPES of animal bones comparatively in human settlements. Imagine how many animals there are, now think of all the types of bones that have been found in human settlements. That number would only represent a tiny fraction of the different types of animals in the world.
But we can find the types of animal bones in and around the area people lived if they hunted, wrestled, and saw them. Dinosaur bones are not found in the same burial condition, location, or weathered condition as the animals these people hunted, cohabitated with, and saw on a day to day basis.
We don't find dinosaur bones even remotely close to any archeological dig that is concerned about uncovering human settlement. We do find the bones of other animals that lived at the time.
When we find mammal bones, we don't find dinosaur bones.
Except in the rare case of finding transitional finds, but this is the exception and is easily shown as such because we don't find mammal fossils older (or deeper) than the find and we see dinosaur fossils become unfindable in newer (or shallower) digs.
Please give one example if you can of mammal, human, and dinosaur bones that have been found in the same condition, same location, and same preservation state. Bet you can't.
If you would like, I can show you plenty of examples of mammals and human fossils found in the same condition, same location, and same preseravation state. Well, that's easy, because we're mammals!
What I can't do is show you human remains with Dragons, Gargoyles, Gryphons, Merfolk, Phoenix or Unicorns.