gaara4158
Gen Alpha Dad
- Aug 18, 2007
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Evolution doesn’t happen at a fixed pace. A million years of evolution in one population might yield dramatic changes and in another population none at all. The pace of change is dependent on environmental, genetic, and social factors. Great White sharks, for example, haven’t changed in 16 million years. There has been no pressure to do so. They’re already apex predators. So having bacteria remain the same after a large number of generations isn’t problematic for the theory of evolution, your flailing protestations notwithstanding.In 2017 100,000 strains were completed.
In human equivalency that would be 12,000,000 years of evolution for the human race. E. coli, like humans, can live for hundreds of years. The process was accelerated in the laboratory. So basically after 12 million years of evolution, we ended up with what we started with. E. coli with no more genetic complexity than before. Supposedly we went from a missing common ancestor to fully human and chimp in less than a couple million. What, and you can’t get past a single cell in 12?
And in the end ended up with bacteria, no more advanced then what he started with. The test is still ongoing. Want to make a bet that in another 100,000 strains, or 12 million years of evolution, we end up with just more E. coli? How confident in your beliefs are you? I am quite confident in mine.
You will never get from simple to complex until a genetic engineer splices the genes and creates it....
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