is there a match for the entire Connection Terminated speech from fnaf? link to the text (here)
String identified:
Cct tat. ' t tt , at, t tat a, t ' aa ' . a t t c a gt, a ca t a a, atg, a ca. a a ca , t a at a , ct a t. A at t t, a a t . 't a tat a ta. t a cc, cag t c c ca, aa g a, t t ac, t t. . T t . A t , a t, t tg t t , atg t a a a t a , a a g tat' t at at. a a g tat a gt at t . a ag a . a a. T ac t , a t tg tat tat t ca a g t a aa. A t ag tag . A t t ta t c, t a g t. T 't g t . t , t ac a a atg at t ca. Atg, , t at t a t a , 't t atg, . agt, ca a , t a . t' at t tct t ct. ' tat tat a, t a t t a t t , a t t t t t a t a t t t , a t, at ca . a 't ctt t aa, t agt. c't a t, t a . t' t t t - , a t a ca a. T a . ccat.
Closest match: Homo sapiens BAC clone RP11-504G5 from 2, complete sequence
Common name: Common human
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Sapien boy and neanderthal girl doze in the springtime, finally together again
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45,000-year-old bones unearthed in cave are oldest modern-human remains in Central Europe
Modern humans crossed the Alps into chilly Northern Europe about 45,000 years ago, meaning they may have coexisted with Neanderthals in Europe for thousands of years longer than experts previously thought, according to new research.
The discovery — of 13 bone fragments belonging to Homo sapiens who occupied a cave in Germany between about 44,000 and 47,500 years ago — catalogs the oldest known H. sapiens remains from Central and Northwest Europe, the researchers said. The finding also surprised the team because, as they found, the climate in the region was frigid at that time.
"This shows that even these earlier groups of Homo sapiens dispersing across Eurasia already had some capacity to adapt to such harsh climatic conditions," Read more.
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My friend told me to post so I did.
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The migrations of Homo Sapiens.
by AtelierHGSempai
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Slowly working on this one, it's still an intimidating task (does that sound familiar to other artists? I dunno where to begin with this one lol, so I just slowly refine parts of the sketch and gather references) I'm still very excited about this idea and promised myself to finish it this year at least. So fingers crossed 🤞
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Called for the best duo, and these two homo-sapiens   picked up
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On a secluded beach in Morocco, an extraordinary window into our past has been uncovered, revealing 85 human footprints that trace back to an astonishing 90,000 years ago. This remarkable find offers a unique glimpse into the lives of a group of Homo sapiens who walked the earth during the Late Pleistocene era.
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Early risers might have Neanderthal DNA to thank for their morning habits, an early study suggests.
An analysis found genes passed on by Neanderthals and Denisovans, two ancient cousins of modern-day humans, may help make some of us morning people.
"This was really exciting to us, and not expected," Tony Capra at the University of California, San Francisco, told New Scientist.
Continue Reading.
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neanderthal girl and sapien boy reunite after a long winter kept them apart
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Oldest ever Homo sapiens footprint is found, pushing the record back by 30,000 years
Just over two decades ago, as the new millennium began, it seemed that tracks left by our ancient human ancestors dating back more than about 50,000 years were excessively rare.
Only four sites had been reported in the whole of Africa at that time. Two were from East Africa: Laetoli in Tanzania and Koobi Fora in Kenya; two were from South Africa (Nahoon and Langebaan). In fact the Nahoon site, reported in 1966, was the first hominin tracksite ever to be described.
In 2023 the situation is very different. It appears that people were not looking hard enough or were not looking in the right places. Today the African tally for dated hominin ichnosites (a term that includes both tracks and other traces) older than 50,000 years stands at 14. Read more.
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An illustration I made a while ago with PhyloPic silhouettes as part of my chapter on human evolution (“Three Histories of the Human Body”) in the anti-creationism volume God’s Word or Human Reason?.
This illustration is under the CC-BY 3.0 license. See here for more on this image.
Other diagrams I’ve made on evolution.
A paleofiction comic book series about much earlier human ancestors.
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Paleolithic Commerce
40,000 years ago on the grassy steppes of Pleistocene Europe, a Neanderthal trader plies some exquisite furs of his to an Aurignacian (Homo sapiens) couple. Although modern humans like the Aurignacians would end up displacing the Neanderthals in Europe, some peaceful interactions between the two hominin lineages must have taken place, especially considering the genetic evidence for interbreeding between them in Eurasia.
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