bilbo baggins
New member
...quantified in favor biodiversity? .
Creation of the worlds species is fully evident in the fossil record. Absolutely no transition of one life form to another even exists.
Except of course for an artists rendering. Even if the time frame was as astronomical as evolution predicts ,there would be many types of fully recognizable transition...even to a common layman.
Starfish are found with no evolutionary ancestors. A hypothesis exists for evolutionists ...but that is all.
Each basic type is distinct in the modern world and in the fossil record, although there is much variation within these basic types. While gradual, "Darwinian" evolution has always predicted that in-between forms would one day be found, the current rage in evolutionary circles is the concept of rapid evolution, or "punctuated equilibrium"—proposing that small isolated portions of a larger population evolved rapidly and left no fossils.
But where is the evidence that they evolved at all?
'
puredagnast....
Tetrapod footprints found in Poland and reported in Nature in January 2010 were “securely dated” at 18 million years older than Tiktaalik, which means that Tiktaalik cannot be part of the fish-to-legged-animal transition, which is now considered to have occurred at around 400 million years ago. [reference to a Nature paper].
sorreee ....but that doesn't help the case for evolution any.
.
Creation of the worlds species is fully evident in the fossil record. Absolutely no transition of one life form to another even exists.
Except of course for an artists rendering. Even if the time frame was as astronomical as evolution predicts ,there would be many types of fully recognizable transition...even to a common layman.
Starfish are found with no evolutionary ancestors. A hypothesis exists for evolutionists ...but that is all.
Each basic type is distinct in the modern world and in the fossil record, although there is much variation within these basic types. While gradual, "Darwinian" evolution has always predicted that in-between forms would one day be found, the current rage in evolutionary circles is the concept of rapid evolution, or "punctuated equilibrium"—proposing that small isolated portions of a larger population evolved rapidly and left no fossils.
But where is the evidence that they evolved at all?
'
puredagnast....
Tetrapod footprints found in Poland and reported in Nature in January 2010 were “securely dated” at 18 million years older than Tiktaalik, which means that Tiktaalik cannot be part of the fish-to-legged-animal transition, which is now considered to have occurred at around 400 million years ago. [reference to a Nature paper].
sorreee ....but that doesn't help the case for evolution any.
.