No, we don't. In the Cambrian, there are no . . .
trees
grasses
flowers
jawed fish
amphibians
reptiles
birds
dinosaurs
insects
mammals
. . . just to name a few.
I was mainly saying that all the basic body plans of all phyla came into existence out of virtually nowhere and quite suddenly in an evolutionary scale.
Remember you said that. This is the closest organism we can find to a modern vertebrate in the Cambrian.
It is called Haikouella. It has no bones, barely has a brain, no lungs, no limbs, no jaw, and no complex internal organs. Are you saying that this organism is as complex as humans? Are you saying that you have no problem with all vertebrates evolving from Haikouella since it would not require an increase in complexity?
There were many complex forms that came into the Cambrian level. The eyes of the trilobites are very complex.
The Trilobite: Enigma of Complexity
The Trilobite: Enigma of Complexity
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The theory of the Cambrian Explosion holds that, beginning some 545 million years ago, an explosion of diversity led to the appearance over a relatively short period of 5 million to 10 million years of a huge number of complex, multi-celled organisms.
Cambrian Explosion
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Who said that the evolution of kangaroos and wombats from a common ancestor also explains the evolution of all life?
What I was saying is that there are many animals that are still alive today which had larger versions of them millions of years ago. They didn't actually evolve from something else. They are just smaller version of the same animals. This may be the case with many animals. Reptiles such as the komodo dragon and even frill neck lizards may just be smaller versions of the dinos. But they are basically the same animals but smaller versions.
This can be something that happened within an animals existing genetic info. They havnt morphed from a totally different creature but just changed in size and other smaller features but are basically the same creatures. The genetic ability of animals back then to make a great amount of variation of size, color and smaller changes to shapes or even additions of certain features like feathers is all possible within the existing genetic info of an animals genome.
The genomes of early animals could have produced most of the variety we see today. The thing is evolutionists have misinterpreted this as evolution. They have labels many creatures as new and different species that have morphed out of existing ones through random mutations. But mutations are basically harmful and rarely make beneficial changes that can account for all the variety we see and has ever existed since time began.
No, it doesn't. For example, the evolution of dark fur in pocket mice required the random mutation of the mc1r gene.
"We conducted association studies by using markers in candidate pigmentation genes and discovered four mutations in the melanocortin-1-receptor gene, Mc1r, that seem to be responsible for adaptive melanism in one population of lava-dwelling pocket mice."
The genetic basis of adaptive melanism in pocket mice
Yes but wouldn't the mutation be the mixing of existing genes that produce colors for the fur. Afterall we all have the genetic info within our genes for hair color, skin color ect. The recombination of existing genes whether doesn't make new info to say turn that mouse into a cat ect or make that mouse grow wings or gills for swimming under water. That info isn't there and hasn't been proven in lab tests. They have caused bacteria to evolve and resist anti biotic which was a feature it never had before. But that ability was built from the existing genetics it already had. They can mutate flies to have legs growing out of their heads and give them extra wings. But they cant turn that fly into a grass hopper or give it spider web making ability.
Just as humans, chimps, gorillas, and orangutans are all variations of our common ancestor. That is what evolution does, produce variation over time.
So if each animals was made just as it was there would be variation within each of those types of animals as no one is the same. Some have big noses, some are tall and some are darker in color. So humans have much variation and can have some similarities with apes. They can also have some similarities with non related creatures like the octopus. Humans have similarities with the eyes of octopuses.
http://www.iflscience.com/plants-and-animals/squid-and-humans-evolved-same-eye
There are animals that are very similar that are unrelated so comparing similar features is not a reliable way to link animals all the time. Like I mentioned before the skulls discovered at Georgia may have wiped out several species that were named by evolutionists. This has now made all those species into one because the great variation within the one species covered all the different shapes that evolutionists used to make other species. So what this does is cut out some of the links made for the transitions of ape man. It also indicates that there maybe only one species of man.
If the early australopithecines are seen as just apes then it makes a case for just one real species of man with great variety and then all the apes with their great variety. Variety is different to transitions. Variety is using the natural limits of existing genetics that can give differences to color with skin and hair for example, size, shapes of eyes for example with slanted eyes ect. No two animals within the same species are exactly the same and this is the natural variation we see. But the abilities are limited.
http://www.nature.com/news/skull-suggests-three-early-human-species-were-one-1.13972
Are you saying that haikouella had all of the DNA needed to make everything from sharks to humans?
Who knows. They say that micro organisms have a great deal of HGT going on. They are a lot more able to share genetic material with each other. So if this was all life was at one stage then it is easy to see that the gene pool may have been very large and much of the blue prints for all life was there being shared around. But it could also be that this layer happens to be at the bottom because they are mainly bottom dwellers. There were other forms of life living on earth. All these creatures were made with great ability within their genomes to make a great deal of variation in life.
That info has been there for a long time and is drawn upon when needed. This is being seen with the discovery of the so called junk DNA having more function that previously thought. The so called junk DNA can switch genes on and off and there maybe thousands of combinations available or various triggers and codes which can be used to build body parts in various ways. Who knows until they continue to map out the rest of the genomes of animals and humans. But because its looking so detailed and complex and way beyond what they imagined I would say that there is a lot more explaining to do as to how this could all be made form random mutations which are basically harmful. There seems to be a lot of hidden codes and systems in place which have influence and order in making animals and humans.