Black Akuma
Shot a man in Reno, just to watch him die...
I will have to think about the snake and do some research before i answer. I am not a biologist or a geneticist so i have to do the hard yards and try to find out myself. This is where i have to rely on the experts. But like i said i like to challenge the main view as to me it doesn't make sense quite often
Pardon me, but no you don't want to challenge your main view. If you did, you would read the paper I provided for you. Instead, what you're likely going to do is go to creationist websites who'll give you the same hackneyed, threadbare arguments they always do and tell you exactly what you want to hear.
You want your beliefs confirmed, so you look for confirmation. Only a few pages ago you were complaining about about peer reviewed journals, I provide one to support my argument, and you don't even bother to read it. I even went to the trouble of finding a free version.
But to me this doesn't necessarily prove evolution because a snake can easily be seen as coming from a lizard or reptile in many ways.
Such as?
After all its one thing to say a snake comes from a reptile
Snakes ARE reptiles.
At any rate, my main goal was to show you that evolution can and is being tested all the time, so I'm going to stick with that for the moment. Allow me to provide two more examples.
There are three existing group of amphibians - frogs, salamanders, and caecilians. We know that frogs and salamanders are the most closely related of the three. So, here's a prediction - we should, in the fossil record, find a creature that possess traits of both frogs and salamanders. If we look throughout the history of amphibians and find nothing like this, it's a problem. If we find a fossil with traits that more closely resemble a frog and a caecillian, that's a problem. Evolutionary theory requires that this transitional has the characteristics we expect it to have, and it has to be before salamanders and frogs come on to the scene.
And guess what?
A stem batrachian from the Early Permian of Texas and the origin of frogs and salamanders : Abstract : Nature

Here's a question for you - is this a frog or a salamander? If you can even come to that conclusion at all, how did you reach it?
Not enough? Okay, we'll try another. How about turtles?
Turtles are unique among reptiles - they have a shell, and no teeth. So, if turtles really did evolve from other reptiles, we should expect to see an early form of turtle with teeth, and signs of an early shell. If we find that turtles never had teeth, as far back as they go, that's a problem. Same with the shell. Evolutionary theory demands that early turtles show signs of these things developing.
And guess what we find, in the oldest fossils of turtles?
An ancestral turtle from the Late Triassic of southwestern China : Abstract : Nature

Prediction made, prediction fulfilled. Evolution tested.
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