well the obvious question is where did they all come from if there is no evolutional history?
How did you determine that they have no evolutionary history? You act as if we have multiple fossils from every species that has ever lived, and that we have searched every single geologic stratum that exists. You also pretend as if every single organism that has ever existed has left a fossil for us to examine.
Also, "evolutional" is not a word. "Evolutionary" is the one you are looking for.
I think it's mysterious that everything appeared, basically overnight geologically speaking.
Yeah, just like modern humans suddenly appear in the fossil record . . . until we found H. erectus. And then H. erectus appeared as if it suddenly appeared . . . until we found Australopithecus afarenesis. And then we found A. sediba, yet another transitional.
Sudden appearances are due to searching such a tiny, tiny portion of a geologic record that is not complete to begin with.
It's a mysterious thing for evolutionists.
Hasn't been a mystery for 150 years:
"Hence, when the same species occur at the bottom, middle, and top of a formation, the probability is that they have not lived on the same spot during the whole period of deposition, but have disappeared and reappeared, perhaps many times, during the same geological period. So that if such species were to undergo a considerable amount of modification during any one geological period, a section would not probably include all the fine intermediate gradations which must on my theory have existed between them, but abrupt, though perhaps very slight, changes of form. "--Charles Darwin, "Origin of Species"
"Only a small portion of the world has been geologically explored. Only organic beings of certain classes can be preserved in a fossil condition, at least in any great number. Widely ranging species vary most, and varieties are often at first local, -- both causes rendering the discovery of intermediate links less likely. Local varieties will not spread into other and distant regions until they are considerably modified and improved; and when they do spread, if discovered in a geological formation, they will appear as if suddenly created there, and will be simply classed as new species."--Charles Darwin, "Origin of Species"
Darwin figured it out 150 years ago. You should catch up.