The Omaha Sunday Bee Magazine Page Yf. -571) IP .r? a .1 T -i it 4 t v '. I ' THE ANGELS DRIVING ADAM AND EVE FROM EDEN. The Artist A. T. Nowell't Remarkable Conception of the Bibical Story Which Professor Darwin -Beasley Considers a Premonition of Man' Final ' .-rrk - .".r; ; "Fall and 'Not a'HUto'ry of. Hu FirsL'. ' Supplied by Autotype Fine Art Co., Ltd. By Prof. C. Darwln-Bcasley of th Unlvarslty.of London, ' THROUGH millions of yer, racs after raco of animals has suc ceeded each other, each race be ing of a higher type structurally than Its Immediate predecessor. It follows that man himself will hare a successor In a ettll higher type of being. This may come about at any moment by eome natural convulsion Induced by an astronomlo dis turbance or other natural phenomenon, euch as has undoubtedly many times caused great changes on the earth's sur- ace- . .v.. In each prior disturbance, such as that Induced by the increased weight of ice caps causing the earth to tilt over and assume a new position in respect to the sun. a few genera of animals have in variably escaped and survived to speclal lze in new functions to meet the new conditions of environment. The next colossal convulsion is not rat off. and it will most probably occur through the abnormal increase of Ice forming in the Antarctic regions. When that happens, birds will be best fitted to escape. Enough of them in various parts of the world will undoubtedly survive to found the new and higher race. Remember that birds and mammals alone have specialised in brains and have built up in their skulls ample brain case at the expense of other bone. With the brainier man and other hramy .it th bird, having "become the dominant being, will have to Birds Man's Rival in Intelligence ByProf.w.H.if.Baiiou,scD. THE theory that mankind will be superseded by a race of super birds, which will control all the earth as man does now, Is not entirely a new one to scientists. Birds have continuously evolved, in one torn or another, sine the Juraeslo era It is also noted that they have sur vived the several natural convulsions end phenomena occurring since then, such as the evaporation of water in large areas of the world during the hot Mio cene period, the various glacial epochs. "Further confirmation, bearing on the point, is the admission by the distin guished Professor J. Arthur Thompson, of the University of Aberdeen. He says: "There is a poeelbility of a vast in ereae ef Intelligence, of brain Impreve meM, ainHlar te that of man ana the primates, as le Inetanced In reeke, era nee and parrete. There la alee a chance far larger changes . In cenetitutlen habits!" . ... It Is also to be noted that when a bird finds a new form of food he abandons the use of certain functions and utilises new means to capture it. Hla descendants, continuing his efforts, specialise in new functions until there is a complete change and an entirely new form of bird la produced. There are ample instances In support of this. The penguin affords one of the most drastic incidents of natural selec tion. It is a general proposition that a bird must have feathers. The ancestral penguins, therefore, must have had them. Being unable to escape the Antarctic regions when the ice cap commenced forming they specialized la several radi cal ways. Gradually their feathers be v V f - 7 j' .r, - - Hi" V. I, - i v Lit ki' further specialize, as man did, through thousands of years largely In brain alone. ' The bird brain to-day has already ample cerebrum. Its descendants in the new era will have first to specialise in convolutions of the brain, each new con volution increasing this intelligence. They will have to cultivate next for a long period brain cells, with which thought is produced and stored In the form which we call memory. This development Is not only possible; it is Indeed the way In which nature has always worked her will in the world. That it would take ages to accomplish means nothing. - The life of the whole human race from the time it emerged as ape man until to-day is only an Instant in geological time. Forms perish, nature endures. . - Humanity's vision of the angels, a higher form of life as winged beings. Is, I believe, his clairvoyant perception of his own doom and the race that will fol low him. All his Ideas of future life take the form of wings. The vision is simply the far-seeing of humanity that confuses with itself the actual creature that will follow It Angels, winged things, will rule the future world, but they will not ' be transformed humanity. They will be Intellectual birds I - la material things of to-day, the bird man is another expression of the same thing. It is either that or else it is an instinctive or unconscious effort of man to prepare himself for the struggle when he will have to compete with this future bird-race. The flying machine has been gradually perfected by mastering essen tial details of bird flight. In its perfected came something between scales and hairs. This new coating not being warm enough they accumulated tat sufficient to defy the Antarctic eold and storms and enjoy themselves. The penguin further specialized wing power for swim ming only, until the wings became pow erful paddles, moved by strong breast muscles, and leg power for walking. The latter is so powerful that when walking, as be does in a straight line, he forces movable objects out of bis way, and not even a mau can stop him. Birds vary the use of their limbs to suit circumstances. The steamer duck of the Falkland Islands is a conspicuous instance. In youth these birds fly about like their kind in general. As soon as the adult stage Is reached they abandon flylag altogether, aad use wings and feet for swimming only. The hoactzln of Britlsh-Gulana is an other striking Instance. Boon after hatching the young birds begin to travel by means of legs and wings. They have well developed claws on the thumb and finger, by which they book on to limbs or other objects. If taken by the legs they hang on to something with bill and wings. If their nest falls down they cling to the branches with bill, wings and feet Later they take to true flight. The ostrich specialized in running, and on local American pacing tracks has about equalled the trotting horse by hauling a sulky and man at the near record speed of 2:10. He' apparently has never attempted flight, whatever bis an cestors did. He utilizes his rather large wings and long feathers to assist in running. The migrations of birds undoubtedly J .4- ; 1 i ' form It is a bird mechanism combined with a human brain. The coming super-race will necessarily approximate the same thing in a more compact form, in a single Individual Great powers of flight and long endur ance in air, while the earth below is un dergoing its tremendous convulsions, will be essential for survival. The birds which can fly the highest above the poisonous gases unloosed, and encircle the globe If necessary, In the search for surviving food, will have the best chanee to ultl- mately escape and found this new race. Unless man can do the same thing with an aerial machine, he will perish Just as the beasts and beings that walk or crawl. But he cannot possibly by invention hope ever, to accomplish survival, even in Isolated instances, during the per sistence of a world convulsion, although many may escape results of minor dis turbances. Fuel for his mechanism would , be Impossible to secure. His own struc- ' ture is unfitted for indefinite endurance in air. The bird alone Is hardened to aerial indefinite endurance and hence is the only earthly being available with which to found the super-race. What birds would be best equipped te . survive a world convulsion? It requires only a layman's knowledge to answer that From the standpoint of science, we know that only carnivorous animals have , been dominant in each age of the world, and that each highest type that has arisen after each convulsion has been a carnivore. We know that of existing types the birds of prey, such as condors, vultures and eagles, also storks, adju tants and pelicans, have the powers of are indicative of their greatest intelli gence. Books bave been written about them, but I happen to have from the Rus sian Government data far mora remark able than that found in books. Siberia, the coldest storage reservoir extant the li Ti' ' r . Penguins of the Antarctic Continent, a Strangely Human Raca of Birds Wtto Now Dominate That Part of the World o. b, sir Dofu. copyright, IMS. by the star Co r.t r.i- -hts iu..rv.a. Msl Mce dttmiMieuMKirfB f -"vrs r.- . ' ' 1 - -4- - V - 7 r. i ""V.' 7 the loftiest flight, some of them rising ta six miles altitude. They alee have great endurance in the rarefied regions of at mosphere. If any mountain tops re mained, they could readily reach them. If any food existed anywhere, they could surely find it. Carnivorous birds are not subject to ptomaine poisoning, so far as we know. The next class of birds that have the longest endurance in air, far greater than of the birds of prey, are the sea birds, especially the man-of-war bird, albatrosa, petrels, some gulls, etc. Of these, the al batross travels Immense distances with out moving the wings, by his wonderful power of soaring. If the convulsion were merely a water affair, such as the flood, they would not know it existed, so much are they at home on water, in air above the water, and even In the water itself up to certain depths when diving for food. None of these birds, however, are so well equipped with cerebrum in brain case as certain land types, which also have great endurance in flight such as the pigeon tribe. Their better brain alone, however, ' would save many of them, since even if they were hunted by the carnivorous '. birds, they could escape because of su perior Intelligence. - The super-bird of the next geological era, then will be first a carnivore. He ' will be subject to no destroying pto maines' nor any of the diseases which cause mortality of man and other mam mals. He will be at home at all alti tudes. His flight will not be limited by mere globe girdling nor necessities of loBg endurance in air. As to-day, the birds , of prey will have dominion oa year around, attracts the largest number of species for Bummer nesting. Birds as semble there for nesting from many parts of the Old World, arriving and departing annually on very exact dates, as If moved by clockwork. ' ' , , ' "r w M The Astounding Theory of An English Scientist That Intellectual and Carnivorous Birds Will Supplant Hu manity and That Our Ideas of Angels and the Expulsion From Eden Are Simply a Prevision of Our Doom SCIENTISTS are agreed that man has attained his positloa as master of the world only through a series of accidents and a prolonged conflict with nature. They are also agreed that he malntalnes his position only by an unceasing fight against natural forces. Before man, other animals occupied the place of the dominant spceies, and there are sections of the world where even now another species than man is dominant inhabitant There are, for Instance, certain African stretches where the mosquito is ruler, and in the Antarctic the quaint Penguin is practically monarch of the frozen stretches. Bernard Shaw, the great English philosopher, baa recently pointed out that man is not measuring up In all ways to the destiny that he so valnglorloualy assumes for himself that of final master of his planet Mr. Shaw has predicted that humanity must give place, sooner or later, to a super race and sink bark to the level of a domestic animal "per haps be wiped out II. G. Wells, an equally famous scientific prophet, has taken the same point of view. He, unlike Mr. Bernard Shaw, has predicted the actual creation which he tinks will take place of man -the spider! The following remarkable article by Professor C. Darwin-Beaaley, of the University of London, deals with the same question and makes the astonishing prediction that a race of super-birds wwlll some day rule the world. 1 land, and the sea birds on sea. Left alone, with all the other animal life destroyed, they will be forced to specialise In brain power. Their ultimate descendants will have complete dominion on land, sea and in air, besides being self clothed. They will, as their brains In crease in power and they become more and more social, build bird cities. The nest will no doubt give way to habitations of great architectural beauty, Just aa man's early caves and tree shelters still ' form the basis of his elaborate , Skeleton of a Bird's Wing Com pared with a Human Arm and Hand, and Skeletons of Man and Bird, Showing the Close Resem blance Between the Anatomy of the Twe. i "V f.'j' W r I V mm rvv'..f.-- :l Vm if:-:.mi's n, w:-j n: . wl d i b . . .. Winged Beings Who Rule on Mars, a. Imagined by II. G. WeHa. A Conception of a Dominant Kacej Regarded by Scientists as Rational. architecture of to-day. Although they are self-clothed, they will no doubt seek further adornment The bower bird of India ornaments his nest and collects beatulful stones even now. There will be bird fashions. Gradually a new life will cover the world, to be la its turn de stroyed and another race of entire ly different beings take its place. .MM I I 1' ' t i V 1. S 1 4 if - .11 . 1