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Please no. The last thing you want is mark trying to define things. Especially when he starts ranting about 'Darwinism'.
The most commonly recognized definition of evolution is the change of alleles (traits) in populations over time. You have to understand, genetics was not regarded as a true science for the first fifty years of it's history. That seems a little hard to reconcile to the fact that geneticists were doing profoundly empirical work on Chromosome theory and while in the hunt for, what would become known as, the DNA double helix model. Geneticists simply track and manipulate traits, one of the best tools throughout their history was population statistics. There was a problem with that, the geneticist knew about the external traits and the molecular biologists could identify the physical elements but they couldn't connect the cause and effect until the DNA double helix model.Yes. Can you take that further?
Ugh says the caveman! Oh come on, you know you want me to start a rant on Darwinism. Just let me get a few jabs in, I promise not to take my soap box down to the park and scare the pigeons anymore.Please no. The last thing you want is mark trying to define things. Especially when he starts ranting about 'Darwinism'.
The most commonly recognized definition of evolution is the change of alleles (traits) in populations over time. You have to understand, genetics was not regarded as a true science for the first fifty years of it's history. That seems a little hard to reconcile to the fact that geneticists were doing profoundly empirical work on Chromosome theory and while in the hunt for, what would become known as, the DNA double helix model. Geneticists simply track and manipulate traits, one of the best tools throughout their history was population statistics. There was a problem with that, the geneticist knew about the external traits and the molecular biologists could identify the physical elements but they couldn't connect the cause and effect until the DNA double helix model.
Historical digression aside, the definition of evolution was coined by Ernst Mayr, who studied birds (orinthology) for nearly half a century before contributing to the Modern Synthesis. Statistics are a powerful scientific tool, it's ability to predict are evident in so many fields from the spread of disease to the development of hybrids. Speaking of hybrids, Mendel was working on exactly that when he published his famous pea plant experiments paper, yielding what would be the scientific backbone of chromosome theory and the laws of inheritance.
So did I pass the pop quiz on what evolution actually is? Because I've developed a taste for genetics that has propelled scientific discovery by leaps and bounds for over a hundred years. What I find puzzling is the creationists and evolutionists alike are indifferent to this fascinating field of study that was born in the early fifties as a new science. It is a monumental as the development of physics and the principles of motion in the scientific revolution and very nearly rare in these discussions.
Grace and peace,
Mark
The general idea of speciation is that the two species are no longer able to interbreed. There are a few notable exceptions, for instance, troglodytes and bonobos still can even though they are clearly distinct species. Much of adaptive evolution is cyclical, I guess Polar Bears and Grizzly bears can still interbreed. I found a website discussing how one offspring was discovered as the ice caps are melting they are intermingling more. I don't know how to elaborate further since most of what I know about this aspect is going to be anecdotal.This has taken it further, thank you. But, could you finish it off by describing what happens during speciation, and the roles of species and population in that step?
The general idea of speciation is that the two species are no longer able to interbreed. There are a few notable exceptions, for instance, troglodytes and bonobos still can even though they are clearly distinct species. Much of adaptive evolution is cyclical, I guess Polar Bears and Grizzly bears can still interbreed. I found a website discussing how one offspring was discovered as the ice caps are melting they are intermingling more. I don't know how to elaborate further since most of what I know about this aspect is going to be anecdotal.
Generally speciation appears to be more regional then anything else. Troglodytes live in the savannas while bonobos live in the Congo, what they eat and how they live is a key factor. There is also the Arctic Cod that has a unique and brand new (de novo) gene that keeps them from freezing in the frigid waters of the arctic. I would love to elaborate on the genomic mechanisms that activate and alter DNA sequences in regulatory and protein coding genes, certainly what the process is behind the development of a de novo protein coding gene. I simply don't think the research has gotten there yet. Beyond that I'm not sure what your looking for here.That's after speciation has occurred. Could you please cover how the actual speciation event occurred and the roles of population and species? You're so close.
I'd like to discuss the Polar/Grizzly/Brown bear example more, but I'm hoping we can finish off the roles of population and species in speciation first.
Generally speciation appears to be more regional then anything else. Troglodytes live in the savannas while bonobos live in the Congo, what they eat and how they live is a key factor. There is also the Arctic Cod that has a unique and brand new (de novo) gene that keeps them from freezing in the frigid waters of the arctic. I would love to elaborate on the genomic mechanisms that activate and alter DNA sequences in regulatory and protein coding genes, certainly what the process is behind the development of a de novo protein coding gene. I simply don't think the research has gotten there yet. Beyond that I'm not sure what your looking for here.
It's amazing how close you get. You've talked about speciation being regional. Species, regions, populations... You could add the word 'population' in the text above and you'd be there. Just one or two words extra to make it grammatical as well![]()
Sorry to disappoint but my interest has long been the internal mechanisms. Obvious a polar bear wasn't born to a grizzly bear, a population of bears simply migrated north. As a creationist I'm forced into a very short timeline, remember is the change of traits in populations over time. The earliest genotypes were represented by only two parents and a remarkable short space of time to spread across the globe and diverge on a broad array. Did you know that if a populations numbers fall below a hundred they are considered doomed to extinction? What you would have had from the founding parents is a gene pool that was vastly more capable of divergence then anything we see in the modern world. Adams sons and daughters would have had to intermarry early, by the time the Mosaic Law was enacted this was strictly forbidden. Yet Abraham's bride and the bride of Isaac were closely related.It's amazing how close you get. You've talked about speciation being regional. Species, regions, populations... You could add the word 'population' in the text above and you'd be there. Just one or two words extra to make it grammatical as well![]()
What you would have had from the founding parents is a gene pool that was vastly more capable of divergence then anything we see in the modern world.
Or we can call them larger gene poolsOr as I like to call them, magic genomes.
NoAre you implying more than 2 founding parents then?
Like care about genomicsMagic genomes it is then!![]()
Sorry to disappoint but my interest has long been the internal mechanisms. Obvious a polar bear wasn't born to a grizzly bear, a population of bears simply migrated north. As a creationist I'm forced into a very short timeline, remember is the change of traits in populations over time. The earliest genotypes were represented by only two parents and a remarkable short space of time to spread across the globe and diverge on a broad array. Did you know that if a populations numbers fall below a hundred they are considered doomed to extinction? What you would have had from the founding parents is a gene pool that was vastly more capable of divergence then anything we see in the modern world. Adams sons and daughters would have had to intermarry early, by the time the Mosaic Law was enacted this was strictly forbidden. Yet Abraham's bride and the bride of Isaac were closely related.
If you would understand genetics the best inroad I've seen is population genetics. If you want to see something truly fascinating related to internal mechanisms check this out:
SPECTER: CRISPR is actually an ancient bacterial defense system. It's like an immune system for bacteria, which is surprising because for a long time, scientists didn't think bacteria had adaptive immune systems. But in 1987, some Japanese scientists were looking for something in DNA, and they saw this weird group of nucleotides, pieces of DNA. They had no idea what they were doing and what they meant and what their function was. And in a piece they published in The Journal of Bacteriology, the last sentence literally was, and we saw this weird, crazy group of nucleotides, and we have no idea what they're doing there. And that was that. And that was not for a very long time. (New Gene-Editing Techniques Hold the Promise Of Altering The Fundamentals Of Life. NPR)What you will learn while exploring the life sciences is how much we don't really know. That editing tool, if you check into it, is the single most important gene editing tool of our time. At some point you have to ask the question, what is the internal mechanism capable of altering genes on an evolutionary scale. Now this one turns out to be a tool that adapts the immune system of bacteria, are there other's that can adapt highly conserved genes related to metabolism, external features and highly conserved internal organs? We may well have that answer in our time.
I don't know.