There creationist posters like Heisonear here who are constantly singing their mantra about "the fossil record doesn't testify for evolution." Unfortunately with a thorough misunderstanding and ignorance of what paleontology actually implies - the scientific discipline dealing with fossils.
So I have to explain paleontology.
I find it kind of peculiar having to explain something to people who apparently feel entitled to criticize stuff instead of getting knowledgable about it first.
There are two different things in paleontology:
1. reconstructing the pedigree-like lineages of ancestor to descendant species. This is about to reconstruct and assign the actual ancestral species that brought forth particular species.
2. providing evidence for evolution by showing there are transitional forms between ancestor and descendant.
They are quite different. While reconstructing pedigree-like lineages involves assigning past species as the *actual* ancestor, so dealing on the species-level, providing evidence for evolution mostly is on a higher taxonomical level and no particular, actual ancestor needs to be assigned. Let me explain:
The task here is to demonstrate the gradual transition in traits between taxa that are mostly (almost always) higher than the level species. For instance, cetaceans share common unique traits that make them "cetaceans". Also artiodactyls (=even-toed ungulates) share *unique* traits that make them "artiodactyls". But it happens that in cetaceans we spot many of the traits that are unique to artiodactyls as well. That already provides an indication about their ancestry, corroborated by the observation that of all extant animals, hippopotamus (an artiodactyl) resembles cetaceans most by DNA comparison.
And it's the gradual change in traits from *artiodactyls* to *cetaceans* we clearly observe in the fossil record. Paleontologists are not even particularly interested in Pakicetus (an ancient land artiodactyl that already exhibited some primitive cetacean traits) being the actual ancestor of extant cetaceans. We can't even know because the very next year we might find a fossil of a sister species of Pakicetus that qualifies even better as actual ancestor of cetaceans.
So, mostly the transition of traits is between higher taxa than species, mostly in families, orders or classes. So while we can't be 100% sure Pakicetus was the actual ancestor of cetaceans, we definitely know that cetaceans, taxonomically spoken an infraorder, evolved from artiodactyls, taxonomically spoken an order. Even more, cetaceans, cladistically spoken, belong to the artiodactyls. They are artiodactyls. Because cetaceans have some traits that are entirely unique to artiodactyls AND we have the fossils that clearly show the gradual transition from artiodactyls to cetaceans.
In a next post I shall spell out how paleontologist figured out that cetaceans are artiodactyls and how many fossils testify of cetaceans having evolved from artiodactyls. Because otherwise this post will become too long.
It always brings a smile to my face when paleontologists find some new transitional, hominid fossil and scratch behind their ears to figure out whether it should be classified as a "pithecus" ("ape-like") or "hominid ("human-like"). Often they fight like cats and dogs. Surely taxonomists must classify new fossil species but the great trouble they have doing so is *because* of the transitional character of such fossils and they actually thus should be happy about their own troubles because fossils that are very difficult to classify are the hallmark of evolution.
So I have to explain paleontology.
I find it kind of peculiar having to explain something to people who apparently feel entitled to criticize stuff instead of getting knowledgable about it first.
There are two different things in paleontology:
1. reconstructing the pedigree-like lineages of ancestor to descendant species. This is about to reconstruct and assign the actual ancestral species that brought forth particular species.
2. providing evidence for evolution by showing there are transitional forms between ancestor and descendant.
They are quite different. While reconstructing pedigree-like lineages involves assigning past species as the *actual* ancestor, so dealing on the species-level, providing evidence for evolution mostly is on a higher taxonomical level and no particular, actual ancestor needs to be assigned. Let me explain:
The task here is to demonstrate the gradual transition in traits between taxa that are mostly (almost always) higher than the level species. For instance, cetaceans share common unique traits that make them "cetaceans". Also artiodactyls (=even-toed ungulates) share *unique* traits that make them "artiodactyls". But it happens that in cetaceans we spot many of the traits that are unique to artiodactyls as well. That already provides an indication about their ancestry, corroborated by the observation that of all extant animals, hippopotamus (an artiodactyl) resembles cetaceans most by DNA comparison.
And it's the gradual change in traits from *artiodactyls* to *cetaceans* we clearly observe in the fossil record. Paleontologists are not even particularly interested in Pakicetus (an ancient land artiodactyl that already exhibited some primitive cetacean traits) being the actual ancestor of extant cetaceans. We can't even know because the very next year we might find a fossil of a sister species of Pakicetus that qualifies even better as actual ancestor of cetaceans.
So, mostly the transition of traits is between higher taxa than species, mostly in families, orders or classes. So while we can't be 100% sure Pakicetus was the actual ancestor of cetaceans, we definitely know that cetaceans, taxonomically spoken an infraorder, evolved from artiodactyls, taxonomically spoken an order. Even more, cetaceans, cladistically spoken, belong to the artiodactyls. They are artiodactyls. Because cetaceans have some traits that are entirely unique to artiodactyls AND we have the fossils that clearly show the gradual transition from artiodactyls to cetaceans.
In a next post I shall spell out how paleontologist figured out that cetaceans are artiodactyls and how many fossils testify of cetaceans having evolved from artiodactyls. Because otherwise this post will become too long.
It always brings a smile to my face when paleontologists find some new transitional, hominid fossil and scratch behind their ears to figure out whether it should be classified as a "pithecus" ("ape-like") or "hominid ("human-like"). Often they fight like cats and dogs. Surely taxonomists must classify new fossil species but the great trouble they have doing so is *because* of the transitional character of such fossils and they actually thus should be happy about their own troubles because fossils that are very difficult to classify are the hallmark of evolution.