SPEAKER_04
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I mean the easiest first milestone to do, to be honest, that could be done within a couple of months โ
Is if it is somewhere in the hominid or let's say vertebrate line There are metabolism genes that we all share.
In fact, there are metabolism genes that we share with Bacteria that are very similar.
So there's you probably do you know the technique called polymerase chain reaction PCR?
So, you know why try to do the whole genome and
why not just target a bunch of genes that we know evolve slowly, but do evolve, and PCR those out?
Because that's easier to do than is trying to assemble a whole genome.
And then by having just those, let's call it preliminary sets of evidence, you could then say, hmm, this actually, reproducibly, if I take a sample from the
I take a sample from the bone marrow.
I take a sample from here or there on the body, and I take a sample from the three different main things, and I see the same mutations, and they're different or somehow aligned with hominid evolution, right?
We compare it to all the known hominids.
I mean, that would be the kind of data that you could actually publish in a journal like Nature if you did it right.
Because that's the only way that you're going to get anybody to pay attention.
I mean, why would you put them in a cave in Peru?
So, you know, I find them โ again, I find them interesting and I hope that behind the scenes there are people who are taking a more methodical approach to this who I think should remain stealthed.
Until they have the data to the point where it's publishable.
You know, publishing a white paper or putting something out on the Internet is not the same as putting out data that has all of the instruments that you used, the methods that you used, et cetera.
The reason you want papers, frankly, when you publish them, to be almost boring and so thick with detail that no โ