Conspiracy Realities
Evolution's
Hoaxes
Scientists
Admit:
Evolution Not
Supported By Facts!
Nebraska Man:
How many skeletons do you think were found of Nebraska Man? 100? 50?
25? 10? How about one complete skeleton? How about half a skeleton?
Maybe 1/10 of a skeleton? Hold on, Nebraska man was reconstructed
from a single tooth! What is even more amazing--the tooth turned out
to be a pig's tooth! How could anyone be so gullible as to believe a
man could be reconstructed from a tooth? Yet many people placed
their faith in Nebraska man until the hoax was exposed.

Java Man: How many skeletons do you
think were found of Java Man? 100? 50? 25? 10? How about one
complete skeleton? How about half a skeleton? Java Man was
reconstructed from a skullcap, thighbone, and 2 molar teeth. Dr.
Eugene DuBois found the thighbone 50 feet away from the skullcap,
but assumed it was the same individual. After discovering human
skulls at the same level near his Java Man discovery, he hid the
skulls under the floorboards of his bedroom for 26 years. Before his
death DuBois confessed that he had not found the missing link and
admitted that Java Man was probably a giant gibbon.
Piltdown Man: In 1912 Charles Dawson
reconstructed Piltdown Man out of a jaw, 2 molar teeth, and a piece
of skull. In 1953 the hoax was exposed. The jawbone turned out to be
that of a modern orangutan, the teeth had been filed down and the
bones artificially colored to deceive the public. For over 40 years
evolutionists promoted his findings as fact. The British Museum has
documented other discoveries by Dawson as being fakes. Imagine if
you lived during that time, placing your faith in evolution based
upon Dawson's findings. Wouldn't you be a little upset when you
discovered the truth?
Orce Man: Found in the southern Spanish
town of Orce in 1982, and hailed as the oldest fossilized human
remains ever found in Europe. One year later officials admitted the
skull fragment was not human, but probably came from a 4-month old
donkey. Scientists had said the skull belonged to a 17 year old man
who lived 900,000 to 1.6 million years ago, and even had very detail
drawings done to represent what he would have looked like. ("Skull
fragment may not be human", Knoxville News-Sentinel, 1983)
Boule's
Neanderthal Man: Reconstructed in 1915. Marcellin Boule wrongly
arranged the foot bones so that the big toe diverged from the other
toes to look like an opposing thumb. The knee joint was misplaced to
give a bent-knee look. The spine was misshapen so it couldn't stand
upright and the head was placed in an unbalanced position too far
forward.
Boule's model of Neanderthal man was placed on
display in the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago for 44
years before the mistakes were discovered! After the mistakes were
disclosed, they kept it on display for another 20 years until
they created a new Neanderthal model. What did they do with the old
inaccurate model? Instead of throwing it in the garbage can where it
belonged, they moved it to the second floor of the museum and
displayed a new sign, "An Alternate View of Neanderthal." But it
wasn't an alternate view. It was a wrong view.
These hoaxes should be a wake-up call that
just as important as the fossils themselves is the interpretation of
those fossils. Contrary to popular belief, anthropologists are not
unbiased in their interpretations.