The earliest indication that humans can briefly revert to their primate origins emerged when, in 1894, a pair of adventurers announced the discovery of a stone-age cave-drawing near the Atlantic coast of Spain. This painting depicts a strange, sickening, but oddly alluring scene to the mentally ill. When viewed with direct lighting (the effect does not emerge with reflective light) the prehistoric artwork seems to show a caveman without underwear mounting a cavewoman who may have misplaced her clothing. The fact that an aroused hairy male mastodon is depicted, and is portrayed as watching from behind a tree (i.e. the european hemp tree was often used as a penile representation in archaic cultures, see Williams' Sometimes a Tree is Just a Tree, Oxford University Press, 2008), indicates to v
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| - The earliest indication that humans can briefly revert to their primate origins emerged when, in 1894, a pair of adventurers announced the discovery of a stone-age cave-drawing near the Atlantic coast of Spain. This painting depicts a strange, sickening, but oddly alluring scene to the mentally ill. When viewed with direct lighting (the effect does not emerge with reflective light) the prehistoric artwork seems to show a caveman without underwear mounting a cavewoman who may have misplaced her clothing. The fact that an aroused hairy male mastodon is depicted, and is portrayed as watching from behind a tree (i.e. the european hemp tree was often used as a penile representation in archaic cultures, see Williams' Sometimes a Tree is Just a Tree, Oxford University Press, 2008), indicates to v
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| - The earliest indication that humans can briefly revert to their primate origins emerged when, in 1894, a pair of adventurers announced the discovery of a stone-age cave-drawing near the Atlantic coast of Spain. This painting depicts a strange, sickening, but oddly alluring scene to the mentally ill. When viewed with direct lighting (the effect does not emerge with reflective light) the prehistoric artwork seems to show a caveman without underwear mounting a cavewoman who may have misplaced her clothing. The fact that an aroused hairy male mastodon is depicted, and is portrayed as watching from behind a tree (i.e. the european hemp tree was often used as a penile representation in archaic cultures, see Williams' Sometimes a Tree is Just a Tree, Oxford University Press, 2008), indicates to viewers that they are witnessing a unique but shameful occurrence. Aside from this single ancient artwork, and several disputed illustrations on a File:GreekHomosexualIntercourseMFABoston.jpgping-dynasty Egyptian vase housed at the British Museum, the historical record concerning People Who Like to Fuck Naked is scant and controversial.
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