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The Cambrian problem

-57

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Except that isn't true. (As has been discussed in this thread already).

The Cambrian animals are the earliest with developed shells and skeletons, but they are still have massively simple body plans compared to later animals. There are less fossils from Precambrian, but there are a few, leaving the evolution of Cambrian life as mysterious, but not inexplicable using normal evolutionary systems that scientists have demonstrated at length.

BAMM...they appear as the evos put it...in an advanced state of evolution....with no transitional fossils or linage leading up to there complex forms..

Quite a problem that you claimed has been overcome.
 
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The biologists and paleontologists compared the fossil skeletons of ancient Coelacanths and compared them to the two modern species of Coelacanth and they were significantly different enough to warrant a change in genus.

I'm sure you have a peer reviewed sourse to support that claim.
 
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Shemjaza

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BAMM...they appear as the evos put it...in an advanced state of evolution....with no transitional fossils or linage leading up to there complex forms..

Quite a problem that you claimed has been overcome.
So, you are labeling Cambrian animals as advanced? And there aren't none, just few and there's a perfectly logical reason why. Soft bodied animals don't leave many fossils.

You seem to keep shying away from directly answering this question, but please don't ignore it this time:
Do you think the fossil animals of the Cambrian micro-evolved/adapted into modern animals?

I'm sure you have a peer reviewed sourse to support that claim.
I do. I'm curious why you care, you clearly have no respect for science.

Why coelacanths are not 'living fossils': a review of molecular and morphological data
 
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Shemjaza

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It is impossible for mutations to add up and form new body part, organs or appendages.

Perhaps you can show me wrong an explain how it is possible .
DNA is a string of proteins that cause other proteins to develop. A mutation is a change in the DNA.

It can be a letter added in, it can be letter taken out, it can be a section of letters repeated twice. All these changes will created small or large changes in the organism.

This can lead to new attributes which can be benificial to the animal. If so, the animal is statistically more likely to breed and thus pass of the new traits.

That's the normal mutation and natural selection that we've seen again and again. Over a longer period of time and with more environmental niches open larger scale changes are possible.

You made a positive claim that it is impossible on a larger scale, do you have any evidence to back that up?
 
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Shemjaza

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Because it is not what evolutionism predicts.

My OP still stands.
Again that isn't true.

Simpler life develops into more complicated life. Simple life doesn't have bones, ergo bones have to show up later. Therefore eventually the first species with skeletons would be found.
 
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-57

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DNA is a string of proteins that cause other proteins to develop. A mutation is a change in the DNA.

It can be a letter added in, it can be letter taken out, it can be a section of letters repeated twice. All these changes will created small or large changes in the organism.

This can lead to new attributes which can be benificial to the animal. If so, the animal is statistically more likely to breed and thus pass of the new traits.

That's the normal mutation and natural selection that we've seen again and again. Over a longer period of time and with more environmental niches open larger scale changes are possible.

You made a positive claim that it is impossible on a larger scale, do you have any evidence to back that up?

How is it possible for a random mutation to occur in just the right place at just the right time in a species progeny to the point that it creates a system such as the echo-location system in a dolphin?
 
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Shemjaza

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How is it possible for a random mutation to occur in just the right place at just the right time in a species progeny to the point that it creates a system such as the echo-location system in a dolphin?
It doesn't happen in a single step. Dolphins had good hearing before they went into the water, echo location is many tiny steps over many thousands of generations.

Mutations happen constantly in the population, but the good ones will spread because the animals with them have an edge over their competition.
 
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It doesn't happen in a single step. Dolphins had good hearing before they went into the water, echo location is many tiny steps over many thousands of generations.

Mutations happen constantly in the population, but the good ones will spread because the animals with them have an edge over their competition.

Why do you keep providing me with the coloring book version?

Show me how extremely rare so-called beneficial random mutations can effect the DNA to the point that an echo-location system is derived.
 
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sfs

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How is it possible for a random mutation to occur in just the right place at just the right time in a species progeny to the point that it creates a system such as the echo-location system in a dolphin?
We've already been through this on the Theistic Evolution forum. The dolphin's echo-location system is largely based on existing mammalian structures. Echo-location works even without any of the dolphin's specific adaptation, and there are plausible paths for it to have evolved by small steps.
 
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Shemjaza

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Why do you keep providing me with the coloring book version?

Show me how extremely rare so-called beneficial random mutations can effect the DNA to the point that an echo-location system is derived.
Like I said, several seconds ago. It doesn't happen.

Echo location is just a specialised variation on hearing. Mammals area quite good at hearing and dolphins have a bunch of extra things like skill shape and nose position that help.

Ancient dolphins without echo location would have got along fine, but the ones with slightly better ears would have got more fish, and thus more milk for their calves.
 
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-57

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We've already been through this on the Theistic Evolution forum. The dolphin's echo-location system is largely based on existing mammalian structures. Echo-location works even without any of the dolphin's specific adaptation, and there are plausible paths for it to have evolved by small steps.

Yes, and your post were thoroughly refuted. Or perhaps you can demonstrate how the accustic lens/oil in the forehead already existed in existing mammalian structures.
 
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-57

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Like I said, several seconds ago. It doesn't happen.

Echo location is just a specialised variation on hearing. Mammals area quite good at hearing and dolphins have a bunch of extra things like skill shape and nose position that help.

Ancient dolphins without echo location would have got along fine, but the ones with slightly better ears would have got more fish, and thus more milk for their calves.

Dude, the dolphin doesn't use its ears to hear echolocation....it uses its jaw.
 
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Shemjaza

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Yes, and your post were thoroughly refuted. Or perhaps you can demonstrate how the accustic lens/oil in the forehead already existed in existing mammalian structures.
Those traits will improve the echo location, precision hearing and sonic clicks world still be useful without those attributes.
 
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