Humans cannot synthesise vitamin C, ascorbic acid.
Other animals can, and we are one of the few mammals that can't.
Evolution predicts that there should be a genetic remnant of the enzyme in humans, and guess what - there is:
Nishikimi et al, 1994
Many primate species are unable to synthesize vitamin C including ornagutan, gorilla, gibbon as well as guinea pig and bat; and some primates can like a lemur and galigo. This also appears to be an epigentic change and reversible not by selection, and hence basically means nothing at all, regardless of the ghosts you find.
So basically you are suggesting that your predictions can be hit and miss. If one comes to be, it 'supports evolution'. If one doesn't then it is hand waved away with some bizarre and non plausible scenario.eg Y chromosome, brain size increase tied to bipedalism, teleofish with GLO orthologues missing, pterv1 etc.
Do you know what a genetic remnant, or ghost as I call them, looks like? Let me tell you it does not look like anything at all. It is a set of numbers that an algorithm pumped out.
The Genetics of Vitamin C Loss in Vertebrates
I think you mis-understand the buren of proof, as you are the one challenging the accepted scientific fact of evolution by natural selection then you have to provide evidence.
Actually I am responding to the thread topic and suggesting an interpretation of some data that you have yet to refute that suggests evolution is the sum value of misrepresentation used to support misrepresentation. No interpretation of the data that I offer could be worse than yours.
Just to note, there is nothing about evolution that isn't backed up by evidence.
That is a general comment and means nothing. You can offer many things and I have spoken to a few. Defend them and stop evading the issue. They are as good as any. You are simply unable to lodge a refute, would be my guess.
Birds before dinosaurs is an interesting concept, but I fail to see how that is what a creationist would expect.
If your evidence is correct, then dinosaurs evolved from birds.
It is still evolution!
The point being that bird footprints that appear to look identical to modern day birds of flight dated to 212 million years ago is fantastic news for creationists. Your dating methods place birds less than 200 million years from the devonian, the age of fishes. That is a biblical support. That's great and we are lucky to have found such a find. The chances of hollow bird bones surviving from that time are slim so these footprints are a great find, I reckon. Don't forget 212mya birds were thriving in my scenario and I can speculate that they predate the tetrapods. Flight is seen in flying fish that can glide for huge distances. It all makes sense to me.
It all fits. I do not have to evoke ridiculous and non plausible scenarios and all sorts of convolutions.
Tetrapods have been dated to 400mya and much earlier than predicted, and at the close of the devonian. Tetrapod footprints at that time is great because it is after the devonian that land creatures were created.
Again, it all fits. Just like you, I do not have to have all the answers.
If A. natans is a sea lion ancestor, it would still have to evolve to become a sea lion.
Sorry, the ploy of confusing adaptation of a sea lion to another variation of sea lion is proof of evolution. Well my friend, this is where evos use that magic wand and extrapolate in a huge leap of faith that a mouse deer can poof into a whale. It is a great imagination but imagination is all it is.
Indohyus might resemble a mouse deer, but it had a bone density pattern that is only seen in cetaceans.
That looks more like a rant to me.
You hit the nail on the head, indohyus resembles a mouse deer and the bone density is irrelevant unless you are looking to create your own special intermediates. So what I say is correct. Your researchers are not interested in looking to what any fossil resembles here today. They will ignore a plethora of similarities and zone in on some difference, desperate to find an intermediate. With DNA evos do the opposite.
It all fits nicely for me. The Y chromosome is no problem for me and neither are the bird foot prints, etc. Evos get lots of headaches trying to invent stories to make the surprises and anonolies fit. I am pleased I am a creationist.
Basically nothing I have to offer could be worse than the instability, flavour of the month and biased misrepresentation evos have to offer..