Peter Line’s undergraduate majors were in biophysics and instrumental science. After this, he completed Master and PhD degrees in the area of neuroscience, focussing on brain electrophysiology, and spent over a decade involved in such research. Subsequently, he has worked as a university lecturer, teaching in the area of anatomy and physiology for over a decade. Peter has had an interest in so-called hominid (or hominin, as is the more common term used these days) fossils for many years, and has published several articles on the subject (see select publications list below).
Selected Papers and Links:
- Den of ape-men or chambers of the sickly?
- Line, P. (2016). The mysterious Rising Star fossils, Journal of Creation, 30(3), 88-96.
- The puzzling Homo naledi: a case of variation or pathology in Homo erectus?
- New study claims Hobbit was a new species
- Explaining robust humans
- Sorting ‘early’ Homo
- New Dmanisi skull threatens to bring the house down
- Australopithecus sediba revisited
- ‘Giants’ in the land: an assessment of Gigantopithecus and Meganthropus
- The Mysterious Hobbit
- Fossil evidence for alleged apemen—Part 1: the genus Homo
- Fossil evidence for alleged apemen—Part 2: non-Homo hominids
- Progressive creationist anthropology: many reasons NOT to believe
- Australopithecus sediba—no human ancestor
- Gautengensis vs sediba: A battle for supremacy amongst ‘apeman’ contenders, but neither descended from Adam
- He ain’t my brother: no apparent family ties between Big Man and Lucy
- Inconvenient Neandertaloids
- Big Daddy bites the dust
- Upper Paleolithic blues: consequences of recent dating fiasco on human evolutionary prehistory
- Mind by design (interview)