Morat: You are sweet. But I am growing tired of the debate element of this thread. Maybe I will try again later. But at first you were right. I was only looking for the proof that evolution ran smooth without the boost that I seem to KNOW had happened. But right away someone told me that at the beginning of evolution there was radiation of changes. They went on to tell me it did not mean radiation as I was thinking but instead a boost in the evolution.
No one said that, either. No one said anything about evolution running faster. The history of life is like a cone. At the tip, it's narrow. As you go down the cone, it gets wider. Because you have more variations to play with in each generation.
Multicelluar life exploded across the planet. Why? Because it multicelled-creatures could do things single-celled could not, live places they could not, reproduce faster...
So, unsuprisingly, you got an awful lot of them. And they evolved, only because they were multicelluar, there were a lot more things that could happen to them. (It's rather obvious, right? Single celled organisms do most of their evolution on the biochemical level. You can't develop specialized cells when you've only got one).
I was looking for a smooth transition of evolution supported by actual fossil and not merely the human thought. But I know that is impossible.
They're all over the place. Someone posted a nice foram set. There's a great set of Hominid skulls. Horse evolution is nice and full (once you grasp the notion of evolution as a "bush" not a "ladder"). The whale sequence is great. Archy and the rest of the early birds are great as well.
But here's a little secret: While compelling enough to convince Darwin and almost a 100 years of biologists on it's own, the fossil record is one of the weakest evidences.
Not because there is anything wrong with it, but because the others are far stronger. Protein comparason, for instance. Pseudogenes. Viral insertions. The evidence for evolution is undeniably written in your very cells, Stormy.
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