Problems with
evolution
There
were a few gaps in the “evolutionary tree” when
We
read in the Newsweek magazine issue
of
Evolutionary
gaps.
David B.
Kitts of the School of Geology and Geophysics, University of Oklahoma, said in
the September 1974 issue of the journal Evolution:
“Despite the bright promise that paleontology provides a means of ‘seeing’
evolution, it has presented some nasty difficulties for evolutionists the most
notorious of which is the presence of ‘gaps’ in the fossil record. Evolution
requires intermediate forms between species and paleontology does not provide
them.”52
Norman
D. Newell, former Curator of Historical Geology at the
In
No
transitional forms.
Many one-celled
life forms exist, but there are no known forms of life with 2, 3, 4, or 5
cells. Multi-celled organisms with 6–20 cells are parasites that depend on complex
animals as hosts to perform functions such as respiration and digestion for
them. If evolution is true, there should be transitional forms with 2–5 cells
even as fossils.
Plants. Some 375,000 species of plants
exist on earth today, and most have not changed from the way they first
appeared as fossils. Geneticist Jerry Bergman notes in the Technical Journal (Internet): “A major problem for Neo-Darwinism is
the complete lack of evidence for plant evolution in the fossil record. As a
whole, the fossil evidence of prehistoric plants is actually very good, yet no convincing
transitional forms have been discovered in the abundant fossil record.”54
If plants
evolved, nonvascular plants should have preceded vascular plants (with
sap-carrying channels). However, there are no fossilized nonvascular plants in
the rock layers formed before the earliest vascular plants appeared. Further,
no traces of stages leading to the development of seeds and fruits have been
found.
Arthropods. Of creatures with jointed legs,
the
Vertebrates. A backbone distinguishes the
fish, the first vertebrate, from invertebrates. For the fish to evolve into an
amphibian, it had to develop a pelvic bone for legs to be attached to; but no
fossil fish with an emergent pelvis has ever been found, not even the
coelacanth. The fish has a heart with two chambers, an amphibian heart has
three. The lungfish, which has gills plus a swim bladder it uses for breathing
out of water, is often said to be the link between fish and amphibians. But the
skull is entirely different. David Attenborough (Life on Earth, 1979) says that “the bones of their skulls are so
different from those of the first fossil amphibians that one cannot be derived
from the other.”57 Apparently, neither the lungfish nor the
coelacanth evolved into amphibians.
Richard
Milton (Shattering the Myths of Darwinism,
1997) notes: “Although each of these classes (fishes, amphibians, reptiles,
mammals, and primates) is well represented in the fossil record, as of yet no
one has discovered a fossil creature that is indisputably transitional between
one species and another species. Not a single undisputed ‘missing link’ has
been found in all the exposed rocks of the Earth’s crust despite the most careful
and extensive searches.”58
A “missing link”? Just a second. Have we not earlier
seen the archaeopteryx, which looks like the link between reptiles and birds?
Some scientists
believe birds evolved from theropods (dinosaurs that walked on hind legs). However,
theropods had tiny “arms,” compared to the large wings of early birds.
Moreover, their “hands” differed. Ann C. Burke and Alan Feduccia tell us in Science magazine (October 24, 1997): “Theropods
have ‘fingers’ I, II, and III (having lost the ‘ring finger’ and little
finger), while birds have fingers II, III, and IV.”59 In the same
issue, Richard Hinchliffe notes that “most theropod dinosaurs and in particular
the birdlike dromaeosaurs are all very much later in the fossil record than Archaeopteryx
(the supposed first bird).”60 In a subsequent issue (November 14, 1997),
John Ruben et. al. argue that “a transition from a crocodilian to a bird lung
would be impossible, because the transitional animal would have a
life-threatening hernia or hole in its diaphragm.”61
While
the archaeopteryx appears like half-reptile and half-bird, no fossil remains
look like an intermediate between a reptile and the archaeopteryx, or between
the archaeopteryx and a true bird. W.E. Swinton (“The Origin of Birds,” Biology and Comparative Physiology of Birds,
1960) concluded: “The origin of birds is largely a matter of deduction. There
is no fossil evidence of the stages through which the remarkable change from
reptile to bird was achieved.”62
Hybrids? There are other creatures that
look like crosses between species, but are not. Whales, porpoises, dolphins,
and manatees live in the water and look like fish, but they are mammals that
suckle their young. Of course, the most enigmatic hybrid-looking animal is the
platypus. It has a bill like a duck, feeds underwater like a fish, and lays
eggs like a bird or reptile, but is actually a mammal that produces milk for
its offspring. The only member of the Ornithorhynchidae (“bird-snout”) family,
the platypus has neither “evolutionary” ancestors nor descendants even vaguely
resembling it.
Charles
Darwin had agonized: “Why, if species have descended from other species by fine
gradations, do we not everywhere see innumerable transitional forms?... Why do
we not find them imbedded in countless numbers in the crust of the earth?63
And
why, if evolution is true, does it seem to have stopped?
Vestigial organs?
Several seemingly useless parts of the human body,
presumed to be evolutionary “leftovers,” are cited as proofs for the theory of
evolution. Are they? Here are some of the best known.
Appendix. It is most often mentioned by evolutionists as one of the so-called “vestigial organs.” But it has been found that the appendix is part of the lymphatic system, which, especially in early life, produces antibodies that fight infections in the digestive system.64
Tonsils (adenoids).These used to be removed from children when inflamed, but are now medically known to protect the nose and throat from infection against invading bacteria and viruses. They also filter out harmful substances that could pass into the digestive system. There are indications that people who have had their tonsils removed experience more problems in the upper respiratory tract..65
Thymus. An organ in the chest cavity that shrinks from childhood until maturity, the thymus is now recognized as the control center of the body’s defense system against germs.
Coccyx. Better known as the “tailbone,”
it supposedly shows man evolved from monkeys. However, patients who have had their
tailbones removed have difficulty sitting. The coccyx also holds the muscles
for bowel and childbirth movements, supports internal organs, and keeps the end
of the alimentary canal closed. It anchors the gluteus maximus, the large
muscle along the back of the thigh, which enables us to walk upright (something
monkeys cannot do).
Writers
Mario Seiglie et al. tell us in The Good
News magazine (November-December 2006): “The list of what were once
considered vestigial organs in our body has gone down from 100 in the early 20th
century to virtually zero…”66
____________________
51Enigmas of
Evolution,” Newsweek, March 29, 1982,
p. 39
52David B. Kitts,
“Paleontology and Evolutionary Theory,” Evolution,
September 1974, p. 467
53Norman D. Newell,
“The Nature of the Fossil Record,” Adventures
in Earth History, 1970, pp. 644–645
54“The Evolution of
Plants: A Major Problem for Darwinists,” Technical
Journal, 2002, Internet
55Quoted in “What About
Plant Evolution,” The Good News,
November-December 2009, p. 13
56Frank M. Carpenter,
“Fossil Insects,” Insects, 1952,
p. 18
57David Attenborough, Life on Earth, 1979, p. 137
58Richard Milton, Shattering the Myths of Darwinism, 1997,
pp. 253-254
59Ann C. Burke and Alan
Feduccia, “Developmental Patterns and the Identification of Homologies in the
Avian Hand,” Science, 24 October
1997, pp. 666–668
60Richard Hinchliffe,
“The Forward March of the Bird-Dinosaurs Halted?” Science, 24 October 1997, p. 597
61John A. Ruben et al.,
“Lung Structure and Ventilation in Theropod Dinosaurs and Early Birds, Science, pp. 1267–1270
62W. E. Swinton,
“The Origin of Birds,” Biology and
Comparative Physiology of Birds, 1960, p. 1
63Charles Darwin, On the Origin of Species, Masterpieces
of Science edition, 1958, pp. 136-137
64David Menton, “The
Human Tail and Other Tales of Evolution,” St.
Louis MetroVoice, January 1994
65J.D. Ratcliff, Your Body and How It Works, 1974, p. 137
66Mario Seiglie, Tom
Robinson and Scott Ashley, “Evolution’s ‘vestigial organ’ argument debunked,”
God, Science and the Bible, The Good News,
November/December 2006, p. 11
(Excerpted from
Chapter 5, Early Earth Enigmas, THE DEEP THINGS OF GOD: A Primer on the
Secrets of Heaven and Earth by M.M. Tauson, Amazon.com)