There is no evidence any animal or plant evolved from any other.
Given the massive evidence you've just seen, denial is really pointless.
From Nature:
Fossils indicate common ancestor for two primate groups
Find suggests Old World monkeys and apes diverged 25 million years ago.
15 May 2013
The "study" reveals nothing except the diggers have vivid imaginations.
Nothing but denial? No evidence?
So-called "molecular clocks" are another in a long list of hypotheses and gadgets based on perpetually unprovable assumptions.
You've been misled about that, too. Kimura predicted the molecular clock before it was tested and verified. Would you like to know how he knew about it before it was confirmed?
Barbarian observes:
We have evidence. And that's what matters.
Everyone here has seen the massive amounts of evidence shown to you.
Everything you are pushing on the unsuspecting is based on unprovable assumptions and dogmatic assertions.
Canned slogans aren't going to be very useful to you, I think.
Dr. Wise believes God created man from the dust of the ground and breathed the breath of life into his nostrils, as written in Genesis 2:7
Most who follow Christ see that as figurative, as the ancient Christians did.
Did you bother to read what you copy/pasted?
Yep.
Dr. Wise said, "there are scientific reasons for accepting a young earth".
Yep. He believes so, although he never said what they were. What's more important is his admission that the evidence, strong as he says it is, means less to him than his personal interpretation of scripture, and even if all the evidence clearly pointed to evolution, he would still not accept it. He's an honest creationist.
My observation is that you didn't get it.
Dr. Wise now has scientific evidence for the global flood and rapid deposition of the fossil-laden sedimentary layers.
He thinks so, but actual geologists, people who actually have spent a lifetime studying it, disagree with him.
(another video endorsed)
My thinking is that if you don't understand a video well enough to summarize it, you probably have no idea if it's worth watching.
There you go with that childish "Barbarian this and that" silliness.
Habit from usenet days.
When are you going to grow up?
My kids say they hope never. My oldest is um... 46. Youngest is 23. Three others inbetween. They are all successful, creative people. Partially, I hope. because I didn't get old on them.
Please show us some transitional forms.
As you now realize, Australopithecines are transitional between primitive apes and modern humans. Would you like me to show you some more of those?
The one on the left looks like a dinosaur. The middle one looks like a bird -- a strange one, but a bird.
An ornithologist would strongly disagree with you. It has far more dinosaur characteristics than avian ones. It's close to the line of feathered dinosaurs that led to birds, but it's not actually a bird. It has feathers, and it could fly, but it has the following dinosaur characteristics:
1. dinosaur teeth
2 gastralia instead of a keeled sternum
3. dinosaur tail instead of an avian pygostyle
4. unfused hands like a dinosaur
5 dinosaur muzzle with no beak
6 dinosaur ribs, not flattened avian ones
7. unfused metatarsals
8. flexible spine
Bird like:
Feathers
It could fly
furcula (wishbone)
All of these are also found in various dinosaurs.
So there you are.
Almost forgot. The one on the right looks like a barbarian.
Even if you get peeved, never let them know they got to you.
Did you ever wonder why God chose to destroy all land animals, except for the humans and kinds on the Ark?
He didn't say all. Just everything in the "eretz." Meaning "the land." The word was used to mean "a particular place", a nation, "my land", and so on. Never said "the entire globe." However, there was a flood of Biblical proportions in the Middle East at about the right time. It created the Black Sea. And there are remains of human settlements under that sea. When the Mediterranean broke through into that basin, it must have seemed like the end of the world to people living there, many of who probably did not escape.
Where and when did he say that? It us customary to provide a source when you quote or paraphrase someone.
"Toward a Creationist Understanding of Transitional Forms"
Where and when did he say that? It us customary to provide a source when you quote or paraphrase someone.
Although there are scientific reasons for accepting a young earth, I am a young-age creationist because that is my understanding of the Scripture. As I shared with my professors years ago when I was in college, if all the evidence in the universe turned against creationism, I would be the first to admit it, but I would still be a creationist because that is what the Word of God seems to indicate.
Six Days
by Kurt Wise
Kurt P Wise, geology (In Six Days) - creation.com
There are no transitional forms, except in the minds of the highly imaginative.
I already showed you several. By definition, they are transitionals.
Show us the about a hundred clearly-defined transitional fossils between humans and chimpanzees
Humans didn't evolve from chimpanzees. They evolved from a common ancestor of humans and chimpanzees. And your retreat from "there aren't any transitionals" to "I don't think you can show me a hundred hominid transitionals" makes it clear that no amount of evidence or reason would work for you.
But these discussions aren't to sway you or others like you. They are to provide information to those still willing to consider the evidence and decide for themselves. And this exchange has been very useful to those people, no matter which way they decide to go.
My thanks to you for that.
You are aware that the genetic code is only about a 70% match, don't you?
Between chimps and humans, something about 92% and 98%, depending on how you measure it.
To map the chimp genome, researchers used DNA from the blood of a male common chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) named Clint, who lived at the Yerkes National Primate Research Center in Atlanta. Clint died last year from heart failure at the relatively young age of 24.
A comparison of Clint's genetic blueprints with that of the human genome shows that our closest living relatives share 96 percent of our DNA. The number of genetic differences between humans and chimps is ten times smaller than that between mice and rats.
Scientists also discovered that some classes of genes are changing unusually quickly in both humans and chimpanzees, as compared with other mammals. These classes include genes involved in the perception of sound, transmission of nerve signals, and the production of sperm.
Despite the similarities in human and chimp genomes, the scientists identified some 40 million differences among the three billion DNA molecules, or nucleotides, in each genome.
The vast majority of those differences are not biologically significant, but researchers were able to identify a couple thousand differences that are potentially important to the evolution of the human lineage.
That means it would require millions of carefully-placed and retained mutations to evolve from one to the other. In other words, it is impossible.
Chimps, Humans 96 Percent the Same, Gene Study Finds
If human and chimp DNA is 98.8 percent the same, why are we so different? Numbers tell part of the story. Each human cell contains roughly three billion base pairs, or bits of information. Just 1.2 percent of that equals about 35 million differences. Some of these have a big impact, others don't. And even two identical stretches of DNA can work differently--they can be "turned on" in different amounts, in different places or at different times.
DNA: Comparing Humans and Chimps
(Barbarian notes that Australopithecines are transitional between arboreal apes and humans in have digits that are not as curved as those of other apes, but more curved than those of humans)
Just one of many ways I showed you that Australopithecines were transitional between arboreal apes and humans.
Barbarian observes:
Australopithecines, being mostly bipedal, are transitional in hips, femurs, and feet between arboreal apes and humans. They retain some primitive ape characteristics, but also some human ones. Their pelvises are nicely intermediate, while their feet are more human-like than ape-like. This "mosaic" evolution indicates that it does not proceed smoothly, but by stepwise changes.
Looks like there was a common designer.
Nope. No designer would every design a lower back like ours. It's very suboptimal, to the point that most Americans will experience back problems.
And would be an easy fix. Instead of moving the nerves between a narrow opening between the L5S1 and L4L5 discs, routing in in the open would prevent most back pain. It's not a big deal for quadrupeds, but it's a huge deal for bipeds.
How about you? Did you know the Australopithecine is merely an extinct ape?
In the sense we are apes. It's an extinct hominin, not just an ape, and as you learned, it's transitional between other apes and humans in may ways.