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[QUOTE]Originally posted by DD'eDeN: [QB] Homo naledi cavers: Hypn <https://disqus.com/by/hypn/> <https://disqus.com/by/hypn/>€12> 12 days ago <http://ncse.com/blog/2015/10/cave-homo-naledi-textbook-example-how-to-do-s cience-0016693#comment-2319909560> <http://ncse.com/blog/2015/10/cave-homo-naledi-textbook-example-how-to-do-s cience-0016693#comment-2319909560>I> I am a member of the club who made the discovery of the Naledi Fossil. The article above creates the incorrect impression of the cave. The cave itself has been known to us and visited frequently for as long as I have been a member of the club. It has indeed been well surveyed and what initially started as three different cave systems were all eventually interconnected to create one large system. The fossils were discovered in a section knows as the Dragons back. This section was visited and surveyed and has never seen visitors since the survey was first created (I stand to be corrected but I believe 1980s). A new adventurous member of the club - Steven - set out to re-explore the cave. His visit to the chamber was met with the discovery of the first mandible which had collapsed from the breccia above. It was more a matter of good luck and 20 years of nature's impact that led to the discovery. At least three of the surveyors are alive today, and I will gladly pose any questions readers might have. [/QB][/QUOTE]
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