The Barbarian
Crabby Old White Guy
- Apr 3, 2003
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- US-Libertarian
You were misled about that. Gould, for example, says that evolutionary trees are generally inferred, not that they don't exist. In fact, he mentions horses, ammonites, and forams as examples of evolutionary descent for which species-to-species fossils are readily found. The "evolutionary lawn" is the product of some creationist organizations that try to explain the evidence by suggesting that a limited amount of evolution occurs within "kinds", producing new species, genera, and sometimes families of organisms.Oh, give us a break! J Y Chen and S J Gould tell you the "evolutionary trees" don't exist at all - more like "evolutionary lawns".
No. You were misled about that. The oldest known chordate, Pikaia, is found in the lower Cambrian, as are some other early chordates found in China. The earlier Ediacaran fauna has some phyla that are much older than chordates. However, there is nothing in evolutionary theory that says chordates couldn't be very ancient. That's just a story they told you. And they weren't up to date on the data, as well.Chordates were found all the way down in the Pre-Cambrian layer, which is exactly what SHOULD NOT be the case if evolutionary theory were correct..
Nope. Someone who didn't know any better than you just made up a story..but of course, when such findings destroy the evolutionary time table,
Chordates show up pretty early. But not the earliest phylum. If you'd learn something about the issue, you'd be more effective arguing against science.all we need do is wait for some hack to publish high sounding jargon "explaining" why up is down and down is up.
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