Genetic Track Jumping, How Man Became Man

The structure of part of a DNA double helix
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Genetic tracks are conforming nutritional and environmental niches that living things occupy. Each track holds the resources necessary for any species that follows that perticualar track to grow and reproduction. In fact, genetic tracks cause any animal that occupies that specific track to transpose to it a shape or muscle structure for surviving in that track (convergent evolution). Marsupials in and near Australia such as the Tazzy Wolf resemble canines but are not related.

In mammal less Australia,  Marsupials filled the genetic tracks that were unoccupied by mammals. Marsupials changed their shape to comply with the requirements of the tracks that mammal followed elsewhere.  A mammal that was once a small furry river dweller, jumped from its cat-like  genetic track to the genetic track of a fish and begins to look like a fish-like mammal called a whale. This is because it takes certain physical shape to swim in water. If the animal’s DNA does not convert it to that shape or size it cannot survive in that track and it must move to another track or dies.

The saber tooth tiger when confronted with a dwindling food supply, could not find an open track or could not adapt to an open track and it went extinct. There are hundreds of genetic tracks in nature that are filled and then become extinct only to be filled again by another species who may or may not jump tracks.

Man was one of these  stable genetic tracks, living in the jungle with his fellow apes and for an unknown reason, but most likely a shortage of his niche food, jumped from an ape track to the track of another animal, a totally different species. The Wild cattle’s track. This caused him to have to adapt and grow within the demands of that animal’s track. This is the reason that man’s brain grew is size over other apes, why he walks on two legs and is called the Naked Ape. All these changes were necessary for his survival when he left his ape track and converted to an non-ape-track.  Man spent thousands of years in the track of a herd animal, where his body and brain changed until he again jumped tracks and became a hunter of herd animals.

The point to remember is that a genetic track has the power to conform and rearrange the DNA of any animal.

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