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by learc83
4412 days ago
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>It's completely plausible to me that someone afflicted by the same disorder as Wadlow could've reached 3.5m just by being lucky enough to live longer, That's not plausible at all. Robert Wadlow as at the very limits of human height. He already numerous medical problems caused by his height and needed leg braces just to walk. There is no way a bronze age man with access to bronze age medical care was able to live long enough to grow nearly 3 feet taller than Wadlow. Since weight doesn't scale linearly with height, a 12' tall man would be enormous. Robert wadlow weighed nearly 500 pounds. A 12' tall man would weigh much much more than that. I think there are only 2 real possibilities to explain the giant. Either he wasn't really as tall as the discoverer thought, or something was different to allow him to get that tall. |
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On the latter point:
"There is no way a bronze age man with access to bronze age medical care was able to live long enough to grow nearly 3 feet taller than Wadlow."
You don't know that. Even in antiquity, with Iron Age medical care, men commonly lived to 100 years, with the absolute limit, as placed by the Etruscans, at 110 years, thus defining the Etruscan century at this number. Now, perhaps if the man in question was a giant there would be intrinsic difficulties in being gigantic, but natural selection within his tall genetic group could, as a group, overcome many of them. This is a very different situation that Robert Wadlow's, who did not come from exceptionally tall parents. If a group has selective pressure to become tall, it's an entirely different matter from an individual accidentally becoming tall.
Keep in mind there have been around 60 billion Homo Sapiens Sapiens, most of them outside historical record, and in prehistory, very isolated. This can commonly lead to vast phenotype differences. I would have to see stronger evidence to rule out that an adapted giant biped cannot reach 15 feet.