Nope. As an ex-geologist, I do know a bit more about evolution. The methods used to confirm the theories of evolution seemed a bit too unreliable in my point of view.
What I mean is, they look at 2 sets of animal bones. They see that some parts look similar, while others need a bit of a stretch and some re-arranging in order for them to look similar.
For example, they see a prehistoric land mammal with four legs and all. Then they see the bones of recently deceased whales and go "oh, hey, the whale's fins have bones that look sorta like fingers... if you shorten this bone, lengthen that other one, move it here and there... they kinda look like that prehistoric mammal we found."
Hence, they conclude that the whale is the evolved form of the said prehistoric mammal, and further on, that the prehistoric mammal decided to move to sea and evolve into a whale.
The flaw in this theory?
One, it is unproven. The so-called similarities take a bit of a stretch in order for them to even "be" similar.
Two, there is no proof that bones can shorten, change positions, and change functions altogether... and have it stay that way in the next thousand or so generations.