Lucy's Knee Joint
A Case Study in Creationists' Willingness to Admit their Errors
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An earlier version of this FAQ was published as "Lucy's Knee Joint: How creationists deal with their errors," in The Skeptic (magazine of the Australian Skeptics) vol. 15, no. 4, Summer 1995, pp. 34-36, with additional comments by Colin P. Groves. (Australian Skeptics, Inc., P.O. Box A2324, Sydney South NSW 2000 Australia)
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reationists have been making the
claim that Donald Johanson found the knee joint of "Lucy," a 40%-complete
skeleton of the species Australopithecus afarensis,
in a location "Sixty to seventy meters lower in the strata
and two to three kilometers away" (Willis 1987). They have sometimes
gone on to add the claim that "Only under questioning did
[Johanson] admit that the knee was found over a mile from
Lucy. To the best of our knowledge this admission has
not appeared in print!" (Willis 1987; emphasis in original;
Also see Brown 1989a, p. 44) The
claim is used by creationists to show that (a)
evolutionists are dishonest and (b) "Lucy" did not walk
upright. It successfully shows neither of these things,
because it is false. (Even if it were true, it would not
demonstrate (b), for reasons given in Lippard (1989-90)--the knee joint is
not the only evidence of bipedality in A.
afarensis.)
The claim is not only false, it is clearly shown to be false in Johanson's published writings about "Lucy" (e.g., Johanson and Edey 1981, ch. 7-8) and it has been pointed out repeatedly to its proponents that it is false. Despite this, none of the major proponents of the claim has publicly retracted it. One major proponent has privately agreed that it is false, and a few creationists have agreed to stop repeating it. One minor proponent made a public retraction.
The claim originated with Tom Willis, head of the Creation Science Association for Mid-America, in an article he wrote for the Bible-Science Newsletter (1987). In his article, Willis reported on a lecture by Johanson at the University of Missouri on November 20, 1986. Willis reported that the following exchange occurred during the question-and-answer session which followed Johanson's lecture:
Q. How far away from Lucy did you find the knee?
A. Sixty to seventy meters lower in the strata and two to three kilometers away.
This question was perhaps intended by the questioner to mean "How far away from Lucy did you find Lucy's knee?", but was clearly interpreted by Johanson to mean "How far away from Lucy did you find the 1973 knee joint?" Willis does not recognize the confusion in his article, even though the discoveries of both the original knee joint (1973) and Lucy (1974) are described in detail--including the locations of the finds--in Donald C. Johanson and Maitland E. Edey, Lucy: The Beginnings of Humankind (1981) and in the articles in the April 1982 issue of the American Journal of Physical Anthropology. The creationist misunderstanding would never have occurred had either of these sources been consulted. Johanson's writings have always been clear about the fact that his 1973 knee joint was a separate find from Lucy. All of the bones shown in photographs of Lucy were found at a single location.
The problem has been compounded by the Institute for Creation Research's use of the name "Lucy" to refer to both the species Australopithecus afarensis and the individual "Lucy," as ICR Museum director John Rajca did on the June 18, 1994 segment of the ICR's "Science, Scripture and Salvation" radio program. Rajca said:
"In the fall of 1973, near Hadar, Dr. Johanson found the fossil of what is now called Lucy. The reason it is called Lucy is that the Beatles song "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" was playing in the camp when the fossil was discovered. The first specimen of Lucy to be uncovered was a knee joint. At first this was judged to be a monkey; it was later labelled by Johanson as a hominid. Lucy is a 40% complete female skeleton...."The same use of "Lucy" to refer to the species A. afarensis occurs in a diagram in the November 1985 National Geographic (Weaver 1985, p. 593). Willis (n.d.) has referred to the misleading photo captions in this article as "the stuff of the all-time greatest evolution fraud," allegedly perpetrated by Donald Johanson with the National Geographic staff as dupes or accomplices. (The knee actually pictured is neither from "Lucy" nor is it the 1973 knee; rather it is an A. afarensis knee from AL 333w-56, the "First Family" site.)
The claim that Lucy's knee joint was found separate from the rest of the skeleton has been made or reported by Russell Arndts (1991), Carl Baugh (1995), Walter Brown (1989a), Donald Chittick (1994), Michael Girouard (1989), Kent Hovind (1993a), Scott Huse (1993), Richard LaHaye (1997), David McAllister (1993a), Bill Mehlert (1992), David Menton (1988), John Morris (1989), Dave and Mary Jo Nutting (1991, 1993, 1994), Dennis Petersen (2002, 2003), Douglas Sharp (1994), Paul Taylor (1989), and Tom Willis (1987).
The following is a brief summary of attempts to get retractions:
- Arndts was corrected by a letter to the editor of the
Bible-Science Newsletter from Lippard (April
12, 1991). The letter was neither published nor replied to.
A copy of the then-current version of this article was sent
to Arndts c/o the Bible-Science News on July
13, 1994. Arndts stated on February 12, 1996 in response to
email from Jims Foley and Lippard that he has not
personally researched the issue, that his point in the
Bible-Science News piece was only to
illustrate a certain type of error in reasoning, and that
he should have replied to the 1991 letter to the editor,
which he did see. He did not indicate that he had any
interest in examining the claim or offering a retraction;
his reply suggested that he feels no obligation to do
either.
- On Bo Gritz's radio show "Freedom Calls" on November 1,
1995, Carl Baugh claimed that Donald Johanson inadvertently
let the truth slip a couple of years ago when a student
asked him where he found the evidence of Lucy's bipedality
(from a knee joint found some distance away from the rest
of the skeleton). Baugh's
web site makes the knee joint claim. Baugh has not yet
been contacted.
- Brown (1989a) wrote:
Donald Johanson, Lucy's discoverer, apparently made quite an admission at the University of Missouri in Kansas City on November 20, 1986. When asked during the question-and-answer session, "How far away from Lucy did you find the knee?" Johanson's reported answer was, "Sixty to seventy meters lower in the strata and two to three kilometers away" (Willis, 1987)! Johanson needs to clarify or deny this in writing. None of his published writings do.
Brown was corrected by Lippard (1989-90 and 1989), quoting from Johanson (1989). Brown's response (1989b and 1989-90) was to evade the issue and offer a completely different criticism of Johanson's "First Family" finds. This was in turn responded to by Lippard (1990), quoting from Johanson (1990). Brown never responded further. A letter from Lippard to Origins Research (May 1990) responding to Brown (1989b) was never published or acknowledged. (The information in that letter was published in Lippard (1990).) A copy of the then-current version of this article was sent to Brown on July 13, 1994; another copy was sent via email on February 21, 1996. Brown never replied, but his book, In the Beginning..., does not make the claim. On August 25, 1997, Brown wrote to Lippard to complain about "false and damaging statements about me concerning 'Lucy.'" The essence of his complaint is that he says he was only reporting the claim rather than making the claim himself, and to rely on an ambiguity on the word "this" in the sentence "Johanson needs to clarify or deny this in writing." He now--eight years later--claims that "this" was referring specifically to Willis' report of the question-and-answer session, not to the location where the knee joint was found, and that Johanson had not clarified or denied that particular exchange. Even under this interpretation, however, it is still the case that Johanson's writings clarify the exchange, and Johanson immediately responded to an inquiry about it when the issue was raised. Brown apparently didn't bother to investigate himself before claiming that "none of [Johanson's] writings" clarify the issue. While Brown does include the word "apparently" in his description and reports the Q&A exchange rather than explicitly stating that Lucy's knee joint was found away from the rest of the skeleton, he clearly stated that he thought Johanson was making some kind of remarkable "admission" in his answer. It should be noted that Brown has used this same "plausible deniability" tactic on multiple occasions to distance himself from claims such as that Archaeopteryx is a hoax, that the speed of light is decreasing, and that there are human and dinosaur tracks in the same strata at the Paluxy River in Texas.
- Chittick was sent a copy of the then-current version of
this article on July 13, 1994. In a letter dated July 29,
1994, Chittick wrote that "The knee joint found lower and
away from the 40% complete skeleton was the item Johanson
used in his claim that 'Lucy' walked upright." Johanson
argues that the 1973 knee joint is of the same species as
"Lucy" on the grounds of anatomical similarity, and points
to it as one of several pieces of evidence that the
species, and therefore "Lucy," walked upright. But this is
not a claim that the 1973 knee joint was "Lucy"'s knee,
which is what Chittick and others have claimed or implied.
On August 10, 1994, I wrote back to Chittick asking "what
is the evidence that Johanson has ever claimed the 1973
knee joint as belonging to the individual 'Lucy'?" Chittick
responded on August 26, 1994 by reiterating the example
from his earlier letter of the photo caption in the Weaver
(1985) National
Geographic article. Further exchanges produced no
further evidence of any intent by Johanson to deceive. In a
letter dated September 12, 1994, Chittick refused to agree
with a statement that some creationists have made erroneous
claims about "Lucy"'s knee joint on the grounds that
"Without your listing specific instances, I have no way of
checking that out. Without checking it out, it would not be
honest for me to make that claim." In my letter of
September 16, 1994, I responded that "I invite you to read
my letter and enclosures of July 13, 1994 which began our
correspondence. I listed twelve specific instances with
references." A follow-up note on January 17, 1995, after
receiving no reply, produced a January 26, 1995 letter from
Chittick indicating that he refused to correspond with me
further. Chittick never admitted any error nor agreed to
stop making the knee joint claim. On November 20, 1997, he
repeated the claim at the North Seattle Christian
Fellowship, and was confronted afterward by Pierre
Stromberg, who showed him a letter from John Morris
agreeing that the claim is false. According to Stromberg,
who has attended two more recent Chittick lectures,
Chittick has now stopped making the claim.
- Girouard was corrected by Lippard in person immediately
after his presentation, and given a copy of Johanson (1989).
Girouard asked Lippard to write him a letter, and promised
to respond. Lippard's letter of December 5, 1989 provoked
no reply. A copy of the then-current version of this
article was sent to Girouard c/o the ICR on July 13, 1994.
Girouard never replied.
- Hovind was corrected by a letter from Lippard (October
30, 1993) and agreed to stop using the claim (1993b). A copy of the then-current
version of this article was sent to Hovind on July 13,
1994. Hovind never replied, but continued making the claim
(e.g., on July 1, 1995 in Colorado). On July 17, 1995, Jim
Foley sent a letter to Hovind about the claim, and in a
letter of reply on July 23, 1995, Hovind admitted that he
was in error and agreed to stop making the claim and to
remove it from his audio tapes.
- Scott Huse added the claim to the second edition of his book, The Collapse of Evolution, p. 127, in 1993. He has not yet been contacted.
- Richard LaHaye made the claim at an Institute for
Creation Research public lecture on May 28, 1997--odd,
since the president of the ICR (John Morris) has known the
claim to be false for years (see below). Pierre Stromberg
sent LaHaye a letter including a copy of the then-current
version of this article on June 10, 1997. LaHaye responded
that he has seen no evidence that Johanson didn't say what
Tom Willis says he did (which has not been in dispute!),
and that he therefore retracts nothing--but that the ICR
has asked him to stop making the claim. Pierre Stromberg
has more information on his communications with LaHaye and
John Morris on the web at http://www.eskimo.com/~pierres/lucy.html.
- McAllister was corrected in person by Lippard and given
copies of Johanson (1989 and 1990). He publicly corrected the
mistake during his lecture, and asked for other criticisms
of his lecture and seminar workbook by letter. Lippard sent
a detailed critique (November 7, 1993). McAllister (1993b) responded saying that he
did not have time to reply at the moment, but would do so
before the end of the year. He never did. A copy of the
then-current version of this article was sent to McAllister
on July 13, 1994. McAllister never replied.
- Mehlert has not yet been contacted.
- Menton was sent a copy of the then-current version of
this article on February 7, 1995. On April 25, 1995 he
contacted Lippard in email stating that he had heard
second-hand that this article claimed he had not responded
to email Lippard had sent him about this issue, and accused
Lippard of writing a knowing falsehood (i.e., lie) to that
effect. On the same date, Lippard responded in email noting
that the February 7 letter was sent via U.S. mail, c/o the
Missouri Association for Creation, which published the
Menton article criticized herein. Lippard's email included
a copy of the then-current version of this article. Menton
has not replied to repeated email requests for comments and
for a retraction of his accusation about Lippard, but an
online copy of his article was updated on July 19, 1996 to
clarify that the 1973 knee joint has not been claimed by
Johanson to be Lucy's (http://emporium.turnpike.net/C/cs/apeimage.htm).
- Morris (1993) admitted that
he had read Lippard (1989-90) and knew the claim
was false, but stated that he did not feel that a
retraction of his 1989 article was necessary. A copy of the
then-current version of this article was sent to Morris on
July 13, 1994. Morris never replied. In Morris (1995), he stated that "Only
controversial (among evolutionists) interpretations of
Lucy's hip and (even more questionable) knee give any hint
of slightly more erect posture than chimps." Morris wrote
to Pierre Stromberg regarding the knee joint issue on
August 1, 1997 (see Pierre's web site at http://www.eskimo.com/~pierres/lucy.html).
In September 1998, the ICR's web site republished Morris'
1989 article which makes the knee joint claim, without any
disclaimer or notice of error (http://www.icr.org/pubs/btg-b/btg-011b.htm).
Sometime around June 1999, an addendum was added to the web
page version of this Morris article to note the error, and
complain that
Study of the tactics used in the decades-long harangue by evolutionists to re-establish the pedigree of Lucy's knee is instructive. Evolutionists scour the creationist's literature for any error, no matter how trivial. (Creationists are not infallible, and error does creep in, despite our best efforts.) These minor errors are trumpeted far-and-wide by self appointed evolutionary watchdogs, and used to claim that creationism is not credible, all the while ignoring much more significant misstatements or inappropriate museum displays, etc., by evolutionists.
- Dave Nutting was sent a letter by Jim Foley asking
about the claim in January 1994. He did not respond to that
letter, and subsequently repeated the claim (1994). Foley sent Nutting another
letter, including an earlier version of this article, on
July 5, 1994. Nutting replied on August 14, 1994, admitting
that "it seems that some of the statements you made along
with the article are correct" but maintaining (as does
Willis (n.d.)) that "Johanson gives
the impression in lecture ... that the two [1973 knee joint
and Lucy] go together--although he never states that." The
Nuttings did not admit any errors nor agree to withdraw any
claims. Instead, they repeated the claim in the
September/October 1995 issue of Think and
Believe (vol. 12, no. 5). In the October 1997
Colorado Christian News (Martin 1997), it is
reported that Dave Nutting gave a talk at the "Steeling the
Mind of America" in Vail, Colorado on August 23, 1997, in
which he claimed that "Lucy's knee and head bones were
found considerable distances from the rest of the fossil"
and that "It is certain that Lucy is actually at least
three separate creatures."
Dave Nutting has continued to repeat the Lucy claim as recently as a creation/evolution presentation at Summit Ministries in Manitou Springs, CO on June 3-4, 2003.
- Dennis Petersen was sent a reference to this FAQ in
email on April 20, 2003. Dennis Petersen replied by email
on April 21, 2003, to indicate that he would examine this
document "as time permits," but has not responded
further.
- Sharp's book The Revolution Against
Evolution (on the Internet) repeated the claim,
along with other long-discredited creationist claims such
as that Clarence Darrow used Nebraska Man as evidence in
the Scopes Trial. (Both the knee joint and Darrow claims
were on the web at http://www.rae.org/revev3.html.)
A copy of the then-current version of this article was sent
to the maintainer of the web page on April 11, 1996 in
email. Douglas Sharp responded the same day that he did not
wish to make any erroneous claims, and would revise his
work if further investigation showed his statements to be
false. The next day, he wrote again to agree that the claim
was in error, that he would cease making it, and that he
would do what he could to prevent it from propagating
further. He updated his web page to correct the pointed-out
mistakes, and added a list of some bad arguments used by
creationists to his web site at http://www.rae.org/dont.html.
- The fourth edition of Taylor's book (second printing,
June 1993) does not mention Willis' article or the knee
joint claim directly, but part of reference [206] in this
edition says:
Albert W. Mehlert, "A Study of Comments by Evolutionist Authorities on the Alleged Hominids Found in the Hadar/Afar region of Africa," Contrast: The Creation Evolution Controversy Vol 6, No 1 (Bible-Science Association, January 87), pp1-2,4 (provides evidence that "Lucy" was made up of fossils from two separate sites and was an ape, "probably a chimp-like ape").
Taylor's description of Mehlert (1987) is misleading in its use of the name "Lucy" to refer to the species A. afarensis, which Mehlert himself does not do. Mehlert argues that "Lucy" (which he erroneously says is from Site 162; she is from Site 288 nearby) is a "chimp-like ape" and the "First Family" finds (Site 333) "included many human bones." He does not claim that the individual "Lucy" was composed of bones from both sites; Taylor's implication to this effect is false. A copy of the then-current version of this article was sent to Taylor on July 13, 1994. Taylor replied on August 12, 1994 agreeing that the wording was in error and that he would correct "this inexcusable mistake" in the next edition.
- Willis was corrected by a letter from Lippard in 1989, but never responded. A copy of the then-current version of this article was sent to Willis on July 13, 1994. Willis (n.d.) is a revised version of the original article which recognizes that the 1973 knee joint is described in Johanson and Edey (1981) as distinct from "Lucy," but rather than admitting or retracting error, Willis goes on to accuse Johanson of "misrepresent[ing] the evidence ... for money and prestige" and using "the slick presentation style of a con-man to deceive at least two senior staff at National Geographic ... and several competent scientists." Willis has never responded to any inquiries from this author.
To summarize: At least eighteen creationists have made this bogus claim. Three have never responded in any way to questions about it (Girouard, Menton, Willis). Another two have not responded to further inquiries (Brown, McAllister). Only five have shown a willingness to discuss the matter (Chittick, the Nuttings, Sharp, Taylor), but one (Chittick) cut off correspondence. Four have agreed that the claim was in error and agreed to stop making it (Hovind, McAllister, Sharp, Taylor), and two agreed to stop making it if further investigation showed that the claim was bogus (the Nuttings) but have continued to repeat it. One (Arndts) has indicated a willingness to believe that the claim is in error but no interest in researching further or offering a correction because the article in which he made the claim just used it as an example of a type of error in reasoning. One (LaHaye) has insisted that the claim is not in error, but agreed to stop making it at the request of the Institute for Creation Research. Three (Baugh, Huse, Mehlert) have not yet been contacted for comment. One (Brown) now denies having made the claim at all. Only three (Menton, Morris, Sharp) have issued public corrections or clarifications.
Acknowledgments
Thanks to Jim Foley for the information about the fourth edition of Taylor's book, about David Nutting, about Hovind's continued use of the claim in his lectures and following up on it with letters, about Carl Baugh, about Douglas Sharp, and about Dennis Petersen. Jim also initiated communication with Russell Arndts via Internet. Thanks to KG Anderson for information about Rajca and the ICR radio program. Thanks to Stephen Watson for the initial information about Donald Chittick. Thanks to Drew Talley for supplying Menton's article from the ICR BBS. Thanks to Darren Provine for the Bill Mehlert reference. Thanks to David Buckna for the update on David Menton's article. Thanks to Pierre Stromberg for attempting to communicate with Donald Chittick, Richard LaHaye, and John Morris and for the information about various ICR lectures. Thanks to a colleague from a mid-western school who wishes to remain anonymous for the 2003 update on the Nuttings.
References
Answers in Genesis (2003) "Unleashing the Storm," a critique of Dennis Petersen's Unlocking the Mysteries of Creation.
Arndts, Russell (1991) "MinnLogic: The Size of the Burial Site and the Number of Individuals Buried," Bible-Science Newsletter vol. 29, no. 4, April, p. 8.
Baugh, Carl (1995) Guest on Bo Gritz's "Freedom Calls" radio show, November 1.
Brown, Walter T. (1989a) "Brown Responds to Lippard," Creation/Evolution vol. 9, no. 1, issue 25, Fall, pp. 35-48.
--- (1989b) "Dr. Brown Responds," Origins Research vol. 12, no. 2, Fall/Winter, p. 12.
--- (1989-90) "A Second Response to Jim Lippard," Creation/Evolution vol. 9, no. 2, issue 26, Winter, pp. 34-54.
Chittick, Donald (1994) Public lecture at Bethel Pentecostal Church, Nepean, Ontario, Canada, May 16.
Girouard, Michael (1989) "Ape Men--Monkey Business Falsely Called Science," Presentation at the Institute for Creation Research "Back to Genesis" Conference in Tucson, Arizona, December 1.
Hovind, Kent (1993a) Videotape of lecture in South Carolina (unknown date).
--- (1993b) Personal communication (audiotape) to Jim Lippard, November 5.
Huse, Scott M. (1983, 1993) The Collapse of Evolution (2nd Edition), Fourth Printing 1996, Baker Books, 208 pages (paper back). ISBN: 0-8010-4384-0
Johanson, Donald C. (1989) Personal communication (letter) to Jim Lippard, August 8.
--- (1990) Personal communication (letter) to Jim Lippard, May 30.
Johanson, Donald C. and Edey, Maitland A. (1981) Lucy: The Beginnings of Humankind. N.Y.: Simon and Schuster.
LaHaye, Richard (1997) Presentation at a Institute for Creation Research public lecture in Redmond, Washington, May 28.
Lippard, Jim (1989-90) "A Further Examination of the Research of Walter Brown," Creation/Evolution vol. 9, no. 2, issue 26, Winter, pp. 17-33.
--- (1989) "Johanson Coverup?" Origins Research vol. 12, no. 2, Fall/Winter, p. 12.
--- (1990) "A Final Response to Walter Brown," Creation/Evolution vol. 10, no. 1, issue 27, Summer, pp. 28-36.
Martin, Mike (1997) "Aliens, hominids, U.N. bureaucrats, gurus, and the Temple Mount," Colorado Christian News, October, p. 7.
McAllister, David (1993a) Creation or Evolution: The Real Story. Seminar workbook, Christian Life And Service Seminars (C.L.A.S.S.), Tucson Community Church. Seminar on November 7.
--- (1993b) Personal communication (letter) to Jim Lippard, November 23.
Mehlert, Albert (1987) "A Study of Comments by Evolutionist Authorities on the Alleged Hominids Found in the Hadar/Afar Region of Africa," Contrast: The Creation Evolution Controversy (included in the Bible-Science Newsletter) vol. 6, no. 1, January-February, pp. 1-2,4.
Mehlert, Bill (1992) "A Review of the Present Status of Some Alleged Early Hominids," Creation Ex Nihilo Technical Journal vol. 6, no. 1, p. 19.
Menton, David N. (1988) "The Scientific Evidence for the Origin of Man," Missouri Association for Creation, Inc.
Morris, John D. (1989) "Was 'Lucy' an Ape-man?" Back to Genesis. In Acts & Facts, November, p. d. On the web at http://www.icr.org/pubs/btg-b/btg-011b.htm.
--- (1993) Personal communication (telephone interview) with Jim Lippard, November 2.
--- (1995) "What Distinguishes Man from Ape?" Back to Genesis. In Acts & Facts, November, p. d.
Nutting, Dave and Mary Jo (1991) "Lucy and Friends," Think and Believe vol. 8, no. 1, January/February, p. 3.
--- (1994) "Was Your Great-Great Grandpa An Ape?" Think and Believe vol. 11, no. 3, May/June, p. 3.
Nutting, Dave (1993) Personal communication to Jim Foley after public lecture in Ft. Collins, Colorado, November 14.
Petersen, Dennis (2002) Unlocking the Mysteries of Creation.
Petersen, Dennis (2003) "Leashing the Storm," a response to Answers in Genesis's (2003) "Unleashing the Storm" (cited above), itself a critique of Petersen's (2002) Unlocking the Mysteries of Creation. This document is available in PDF form from info@creationresearch.net.
Sharp, Douglas B. (1994) The Revolution Against Evolution. On the World Wide Web at http://www.rae.org/.
Taylor, Paul S. (1989) The Illustrated Origins Answer Book. Mesa, Ariz.: Films for Christ Association, Inc. First printing.
Weaver, Kenneth F. (1985) "The Search for Our Ancestors," National Geographic vol. 168, no. 5 (November), pp. 560-623.
Willis, Tom (1987) "'Lucy' Goes to College," Bible-Science Newsletter October, pp. 1-3.
--- (n.d.) "Lucy Remains at College," CSA News revised article reprint of Willis (1987).

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