Scholar in training said:
but there still aren't enough fossils to support the theory of evolution. If evolution were true, then we should see millions of fossils depicting all the discreet changes in mammals' bone structure throughout their lifespans on earth; but are they there? No, as far as I know. There aren't nearly as many fossils as one would expect there to be.
What is your basis for stating this?
Go to your source, try to find their basis for their statements.
What is the rate of fossilization they propose?
What observations do they base their proposal on?
How many different environments have they made observations in?
I've spent a fair amount of time in areas that could be fairly described as wilderness. Finding bones is a rare event. Sometimes you find places like the tar pits where lots of animals died, either all at once or over an extended period of time. For paleontologists those places are better than goldmines.
Suggestions:
Go to Yellowstone and find the site of a moose kill by wolves. Watch the site daily for a month (from a distance) and then go back every month (when there is less than a foot of snow on the ground

for two years. Report back how many bones are left at that time, and what their mass is (i.e how much has been chewed away by rodents).
Go to Alaska and find a spot where the bears are eating fish, observe the salmon run and count how many fish are caught. Wait until two months before the next run, pick a 10 meter by 10 meter spot in the river and see how many fish bones you can find there.
Go into your back yard, or into a relatively undisturbed forest preserve. Pick a 100 meter by 100 meter square and observe how many animals go through over a 24 hour period. This will require very careful planning and observation as mice and chipmunks are not very easily observable. Pick 10 1 meter by 1 meter squares within the larger square and count the insects once an hour for 24 hours.
Estimate how many creatures have crossed that area over the last 2000 years.
Now pick a few 1 meter x 1 meter squares and start digging.
How many bones do you find?
How many complete skeletons?