Blue2836 said:I would expect that an absolutely ideal example of a transitional fossil would be one that is unquestionably the same species as a currently living one, with very slight mutations undoubtedly detailing the steps from its previous species to the species it is now. In other words, it would require more than just variation within a species which can be creatively described in any direction that the person detailing it wants to take it. It would require the ability to truly demonstrate the path that the whale, for example, took to become a land walking creature. It should not be examples of creatures that may or may not be merely examples of variation within different species. There must have been hundreds of thousands if not millions of years of these steps between species. If evolution really happened, these types of fossils should be abundant.
I hope the above somewhat describes what I'm talking about. Now, I know what you're saying. Fossils are hard to come by. However, we do have over a billion fossil specimens and unquestionably transitional forms should be there somewhere.
So you are asking for something that we would never expect to find. Transitional forms are abundant in the fossil record between higher orders, but what you are asking for is something we would not expect to be able to find due to the rare process of fossilization and something that we can't confirm because the only way to do it would be through genetic testing, impossible to do with fossils.
Of course we can find what you are asking for in living examples. Speciation has been observed in the lab and in the wild. Those living examples would seem to match your criteria for slight variation and definite lines of ancestry.
Upvote
0