- Mar 16, 2004
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I'm not incredulous, I'm saying that the genomic divergence has to represent enormous changes in the respective genomes possible only by mutations. This gets even more difficult when you stop to think that our supposed ancestors were little more then chimpanzees 2 mya. The line leading up to the hominid line for a million years has only one specimen, Paranthapous, notice the gorilla-like sagittal crest down the middle of the skullNot necessarily.
For starters, it's a given that the real world of biology is messy and imprecise. Nobody out there thinks everything works as per a perfectly predictable, constant rate or falls into a precise order with no margins of error.
For example, we already know that rates of mutation can vary dramatically even within a genome, let alone between species. We also know selective pressures, population sizes, etc, can vary wildly and dramatically change the pace of evolution within a population. Thus we expect to find things that aren't constant.
If the best you have to offer is examples where the pace of genomic change has outstripped the average, that doesn't immediately invalidate common ancestry. And if all you really have to fall back on is an argument from incredulity, then that's no real argument at all.
If you really wanted to demonstrate gross violations of common ancestry, then we might expect something like blatant chimeric organisms with mix'd and matched parts. For example, dolphins with fish gills or bats with bird wings. Yet we don't.
This means that we have a transitional between chimpanzees and gorillas leading up to the Hominid line but nothing leading up to the hominid line.
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