JonFromMinnesota
Well-Known Member
Evolution: species change over time due to random DNA mutation, natural selection keeps the changes that can best adopt to the environment.
Yep. It also takes place in populations, not individuals. Think of a bear in a snowy environment that has a genetic mutation that gives it white fur and passes this mutation onto it's offspring. Which group of bears is more likely to reproduce and survive in this environment. Bears with white fur or bears with brown fur?
I am simply asking do you have the repeatable verifiable experience that can show how a chimp (or anything related) evolve to human.
Chimps don't become humans. This is your misunderstanding of evolution. We don't come from chimps, we share a common ancestor. Think of it like this: You don't come from your 5th cousin but you share a common ancestor with them.
It is peer reviewed, and it is only given the possiblity that this is part of the evolution stage, by observation, not repeatable and not testable.
What do you mean not testable? What do you think testing a prediction is doing? They predicted what type of fossil they should find that link to the earliest tetrapods and where they would find it. They took out a geologic map, picked a spot where they should expect to find it and then found it. Three separate skeletons were found.
Likely once one of our ancestors got infected by this it will stay with us forever.
Yep, it is continuously passed down to their decedents. This is irrefutable evidence for common ancestry.
I didn't research if out of 208000 ERV we only share 84 with chimps, but correct me if I am wrong, isn't this shows that we and chimp are not related at all? else we will see much more sharing right?
Only 84 are NOT shared with chimps. That means we share 207,916 ERVs with chimps. This is overwhelming evidence that common ancestry is correct and evolution is true.
This is a free peer reviewed paper that compares the human and chimpanzee genomes if you are interested.
If you have any detailed questions on any of this, your best bet is to ask one of the practicing biologists that frequent this site. SFS is one of them but I haven't seen him around in a while.
http://genome.cshlp.org/content/15/12/1746.full
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