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perhaps, in many cases, the intermediates never existed.
Just because the form of some creatures has remained the essentially the same for millions of years does not disprove evolution: they have adapted to an environmental niche which has not changed, so their form has not changed, although their immune systems will have evolved in response to appearance new diseases. [You're now going to tell us that there are no new pathogens, because that would require evolution].
Evidence of the evolution of one species into another is sufficient to disprove creationism "intelligent design", the horse for example...
Fossil Evidence for Evolution – Transitional FossilsThe second line of fossil evidence for evolution concerns transitional fossils. Transitional fossils are fossils which are thought to document the evolutionary change, or transition, of one species into another. The orohippus, mesohippus, miohippus, merychippus, and pleshippus are all thought to be transitional fossils, documenting the evolution of the hyracotherium into the modern horse. http://www.allaboutcreation.org/fossil-evidence-for-evolution-faq.htmThese transitional fossils along with rare atavisms* in modern horses are convincing evidence for evolution,(to those who are susceptible to reason).
* Probably the most well-known atavism is polydactyly of modern horses ... This condition is similar to the extra toes found in many of the three-toed fossil horses including Archaeohippus, Parahippus, Merychippus and Neohipparion.
This is pure nonsense. The coelacanths appeared 418mya. They've remained unchanged till today.
It is often claimed that the coelacanth has remained unchanged for millions of years, but, in fact, the living species and even genus are unknown from the fossil record.
The nasty fact remains that they are not really different from their 410 myo ancestors. THEY ARE RECOGNISABLE.
the form of some creatures has remained the essentially the same for millions of years
It is often claimed that the coelacanth has remained unchanged for millions of years but in fact the living species and even genus are unknown from the fossil record. However, some of the extinct species, particularly those of the last known fossil coelacanth, the Cretaceous genus Macropoma, closely resemble the living species.
But "recognisable", "very similar", "essentially the same" and "closely resemble", are not sufficient for creationism:If creatures were designed then modern species and fossils would be identical.If the modern species has even slight changes from the fossil then it was not "designed", it has mutated, it has evolved.
Coelacanths and you and I are decendents of mutants who were better adapted to their environment than their contemporaries.
My dear fellow, if we lived 410mya, we would probably see these very organisms swimming around.
It's called variation. There are several genera in most families, and this is all you're describing. Variation.
Mutations are generally neutral or destructive.
Let's take hypothetical organism A in the preCambrian layers, which was the common ancestor of everything. It's functioning perfectly and doing well. Let's not bother too much about where it came from just yet.It mutates. Now, do you know what a mutation is? Here's a definition from google:"a mistake in the cell's DNA, produced by miscopying during cell reproduction, radiation damage, or environmental factors. ..."Which is absolutely correct.So we have perfect specimen A, with perfect genes, producing a damaged, miscopied, mistaken set of genes in its offspring B.Is that E-volution, or DE-volution?Do you seriously mean to tell me, that that represents progress? And for the next n generations the process is repeated. What would you expect after the nth generation? I personally would expect damage and destruction, and the possible extinction of the species.
"Whenever two elementary particles bounce off of each other, those bits flip."