LOL. Do you realize that you're arguing, "All of the fossils which we've grouped together based on extreme similarity happen to be extremely similar"? And somehow you think this disproves evolution?
Together, you called baby and adults of the same exact species separate species, all to support your theory that speciation occurs. Your claimed based upon similarity fails since those babies and adults were almost exactly similar. I mean please, is that your best response?
I am saying if you cant even get babies and adults of the same species correct that are almost identical, what makes you assume they got all those subspecies they have classified as separate species correct?
Not only is it silly, but it's wrong. If you want to look for evolution of a species, you have to look outside of that species. For example, just as evolution predicted, we recently discovered a new species, Timurlengia euotica, which exists between the gap from the smaller tyrannosaurs to the larger later T. rex variety of tyrannosaur, which had much sharper senses than the smaller tyrannosaurs. T. euotica has the more advanced senses, similar to T. rex, but the size of the earlier species.
Yah, lets cut open its bones and see how that claim pans out...... Again, you proved my point, if its slightly different its a new species, without any consideration as to if its just a subspecies. Because the discoverer of a subspecies doesnt get their name written in the books....
The fact that we found fossils of such a clear transition between the two, in a time period between the two, just as evolution predicts, is itself evidence for evolution. If you're interested see:
New T. rex discovery proves evolution is actually true … again
And that is merely one example among many.
Yah, that's what they said about Draco_rex and Nanotyransosaurus. Until someone with the actual science of bone growth proved them wrong.....
Cite one.
The fact is, you can't. Even back as far as 1755, when Immanuel Kant speculated on the shape of our galaxy (and it turned out he was correct), even then he thought that nebulae might be separate galaxies themselves. This fact was demonstrated correct as early as 1917 by Heber Curtis.
At no point were there any "peer reviewed papers saying the Milky-Way was the entire universe."
If you have to make up lies to bolster your argument, then that's a pretty good indication of how bad your argument is.
Ignore history at your peril.
The Spiral Nebulae and the Great Debate | Astronomy 801: Planets, Stars, Galaxies, and the Universe
"In 1750
Thomas Wright, in his work
An original theory or new hypothesis of the Universe, correctly speculated that the
Milky Way might be a body of a huge number of stars held together by
gravitational forces rotating about a
Galactic Center, akin to the solar system but on a much larger scale. The resulting disk of stars can be seen as a band on the sky from our perspective inside the disk.
[17] In a treatise in 1755,
Immanuel Kant elaborated on Wright's idea about the structure of the Milky Way. At the time, the existence of other galaxies had not been discovered."
At the time all was thought to be contained in the Milky-Way.
Your lies wont change history.....
I honestly have no idea what you think you're arguing here.
Coelacanths exist. So what?
I don't think we
ever heard about "the transitional coelacanth", and I don't even know what you think that means.
Coelacanths do somewhat resemble the early ancestors of tetrapods, but so what? They're a different branch. The Sarcopterygii split into the Crossopterygii and Rhipidistia, the former of which evolved into coelacanths, the latter of which evolved into Tetrapodomorpha. Also, nothing about evolution says that coelacanths have to change or die out.
I'm truly baffled as to what you think the existence of coelacanths (dis)proves.
Because you dont even know the history of your own evolutionary theory.
All you ever read is what they say today. You fail to realize that for years the colecanth was touted to be the transitory example of water to land animals. You dont hear it today because the living one falsified it.
I always laugh when creationists say "fully formed", because it just demonstrates that they don't understand what evolution actually says. Evolution doesn't say that creatures will appear with "half a wing", to pull an example numerous creationists have actually argued. All animals will be "fully formed", all the parts will work. If they didn't, it likely wouldn't have survived to evolve further.
So now you want me to believe that the monkeys tail was fully formed? Or the modern eye? By fully formed I mean you see no transitional forms between one and the next, excepot those you incorrectly classify as transitional.
Also, it's appearance wasn't "sudden", it was gradually evolved over about 5 million years. That may be "sudden" in geological terms, but it's a perfectly reasonable amount of time which fits the evolutionary model.
Really? Show me the gradual in the Cambrian explosion? Or the gradual from one layer to the next?
And it most certainly had predecessors, such as Panderichthys and Eusthenopteron. I don't know how you came to the conclusion that it had no ancestors. Even if we didn't have fossils of some of its ancestors (which we do), you can't jump to the conclusion that they don't exist. Even without those ancestors, we can show genetic markers which support the conclusion that these species shared a common ancestor at this time, so this is a well supported conclusoin.
I am sorry, forgive me, I didnt realize you had DNA from dinosaurs that you could compare to those alive today to make such a claim of sharing markers......
Honestly, it's amazing how much wrongness you managed to fit into one single sentence.
As its amazing to see how much deception and lack of historical knowledge you can fit into yours. You forget I grew up during the stories of the colecanth and know exactly what was taught.
OK, let me ask you, how do you determine what is or isn't E. coli? One method is to determine if it can anaerobically metabolize citrate. If it can't, then it's more likely to be E. coli, because E. coli can't do that. In fact, testing for this Cit- phenotype is one way that's used to tell E. coli contamination apart from salmonella contamination, which instead has a Cit+ phenotype.
You shouldnt beliueve everything you are told by PR specialists. Do your research and you will find that E coli could always metabolize citrus. The only thing that changed was that abiklity was changed to dominance so it could metabolize it fully.
So, if E. coli evolved the ability to metabolize citrate anaerobically, is it still E. coli?
I thought you said earlier that dogs remain dogs, peas, peas and fruit flies fruit flies? I think you already answered that, but are just double-talking now so you can change your mind later if necessary. Since they still call it E coli, I guess it does mean its still E coli.
The
E. coli long-term evolution experiment, which was done in an anaerobic environment in a medium with a lot of citrate (which was originally included to help killing penicillin in other experiments). Over tens of thousands of generations, the bacteria being studied evolved the heretofore nonexistent ability to metabolize citrate anaerobically.
But could always metabolize citrus. It simply adapted due to the fact it was given no other food source.
"The most striking adaptation reported so far is the evolution of aerobic growth on citrate, which is
unusual in
E. coli,"
Unusual, not non-existant.
"However,
E. coli has a complete
citric acid cycle, and therefore metabolizes citrate as an intermediate during aerobic growth on other substances, including glucose."
This is, by definition, evolution of that species. Something you deny exists.
So YOU say.
"Two distinct variants, S and L,"
Hmm, variants, can we all say subspecies?
Even your so called experts dont go as far as you.
"Phylogenetic analysis of clones of the two types isolated from different generations demonstrated that the S and L types belonged to distinct, co-existing lineages in the population,
and might be undergoing incipient speciation."
And pigs misght fly too if they had wings.
Do you deny this evidence? And if one change can evolve, why can't other changes happen again later? And why can't all of those changes accumulate over many generations until it no longer resembles those earlier generations to categorize them together?
Because in every respect those E coli are the same except for one gene being expressed as a dominant gene.
The evidence that evolution can put one foot in front of the other is too overwhelming to deny, but if you can't deny that, then how can you deny that repeatedly putting one foot in front of another can take you a mile? I honestly don't get that.
Ahh, you mean you interpret a tiny change as meaning entire new species can arise, even when the authors clearly stated that this might be leading to speciation, but didnt show speciation was possible. I'd say that too if I was trying desparately to prove my theory when everything in life contradicts it.
I mean even if bacteria dont evolve it proves evolution, thats how desparate its become....
Scientists discover organism that hasn’t evolved in more than 2 billion years