| True Natural History - II (Birds and Mammals) There are thousands of bird
species on the earth. Every one of them possesses distinct features. For example,
falcons have acute vision, wide wings and sharp talons, while hummingbirds, with
their long beaks, suck the nectar of flowers. Others migrate over long
distances to very specific places in the world. But the most important feature
distinguishing birds from other animals is flight. Most birds have the ability
to fly. How did birds come into existence? The theory of evolution tries
to provide an answer with a long scenario. According to this story, reptiles are
the ancestors of birds. Approximately 150-200 million years ago, birds evolved
from their reptile ancestors. The first birds had very poor flying skills. Yet,
during the evolution process, feathers replaced the thick skins of these ancient
birds, which were originally covered with scales. Their front legs were also completely
covered by feathers, and changed into wings. As a result of gradual evolution,
some reptiles adapted themselves to flight, and thus became the birds of today.
This scenario is presented in evolutionary sources as an established fact.
However, an in-depth study of the details and the scientific data indicates that
the scenario is based more on imagination than reality.
The Origin of Flight According to Evolutionists
How reptiles, as
land-dwelling creatures, ever came to fly, is an issue which has stirred up considerable
speculation among evolutionists. There are two main theories. The first argues
that the ancestors of birds descended to the ground from the trees. As a result,
these ancestors are alleged to be reptiles that lived in the treetops and came
to possess wings gradually as they jumped from one branch to another. This is
known as the arboreal theory. The other, the cursorial
(or "running") theory, suggests that birds progressed to the air from
the land. Yet both of these theories rest upon speculative
interpretations, and there is no evidence to support either of them. Evolutionists
have devised a simple solution to the problem: they simply imagine that the evidence
exists. Professor John Ostrom, head of the Geology Department at Yale University,
who proposed the cursorial theory, explains this approach: No
fossil evidence exists of any pro-avis. It is a purely hypothetical pre-bird,
but one that must have existed.106 However,
this transitional form, which the arboreal theory assumes "must have lived," has
never been found. The cursorial theory is even more problematic. The basic assumption
of the theory is that the front legs of some reptiles gradually developed into
wings as they waved their arms around in order to catch insects. However, no explanation
is provided of how the wing, a highly complex organ, came into existence as a
result of this flapping. One huge problem
for the theory of evolution is the irreducible complexity of wings. Only a perfect
design allows wings to function, a "half-way developed" wing cannot function.
In this context, the "gradual development" model-the unique mechanism postulated
by evolution-makes no sense. Thus Robert Carroll is forced to admit that, "It
is difficult to account for the initial evolution of feathers as elements in the
flight apparatus, since it is hard to see how they could function until they reached
the large size seen in Archaeopteryx."107 Then he argues that
feathers could have evolved for insulation, but this does not explain their complex
design which is specifically shaped for flying. It is essential
that wings should be tightly attached to the chest, and possess a structure able
to lift the bird up and enable it to move in all directions, as well as allowing
it to remain in the air. It is essential that wings and feathers possess a light,
flexible and well proportioned structure. At this point, evolution is again in
a quandary. It fails to answer the question of how this flawless design in wings
came about as the result of accumulative random mutations. Similarly, it offers
no explanation of how the foreleg of a reptile came to change into a perfect wing
as a result of a defect (mutation) in the genes. A half-formed
wing cannot fly. Consequently, even if we assume that mutation did lead to a slight
change in the foreleg, it is still entirely unreasonable to assume that further
mutations contributed coincidentally to the development of a full wing. That is
because a mutation in the forelegs will not produce a new wing; on the contrary,
it will just cause the animal to lose its forelegs. This would put it at a disadvantage
compared to other members of its own species. According to the rules of the theory
of evolution, natural selection would soon eliminate this flawed creature. According
to biophysical research, mutations are changes that occur very rarely. Consequently,
it is impossible that a disabled animal could wait millions of years for its wings
to fully develop by means of slight mutations, especially when these mutations
have damaging effects over time…
IMAGINARY
THEORIES, IMAGINARY CREATURES
The first theory put forward by evolutionists to account
for the origin of flight claimed that reptiles developed wings as they hunted
flies (above); the second theory was that they turned into birds as they jumped
from branch to branch (side). However, there are no fossils of animals which gradually
developed wings, nor any discovery to show that such a thing could even be possible.
|
Birds and Dinosaurs
The
theory of evolution holds that birds evolved from carnivorous theropods. However,
a comparison between birds and reptiles reveals that the two have very distinct
features, making it unlikely that one evolved from the other. There
are various structural differences between birds and reptiles, one of which concerns
bone structure. Due to their bulky natures, dinosaurs-the ancestors of birds according
to evolutionists-had thick, solid bones. Birds, in contrast, whether living or
extinct, have hollow bones that are very light, as they must be in order for flight
to take place. Another difference between reptiles and birds
is their metabolic structure. Reptiles have the slowest metabolic structure in
the animal kingdom. (The claim that dinosaurs had a warm-blooded fast metabolism
remains a speculation.) Birds, on the other hand, are at the opposite end of the
metabolic spectrum. For instance, the body temperature of a sparrow can rise to
as much as 48°C due to its fast metabolism. On the other hand, reptiles lack the
ability to regulate their body temperature. Instead, they expose their bodies
to sunlight in order to warm up. Put simply, reptiles consume the least energy
of all animals and birds the most. One of the best-known ornithologists
in the world, Alan Feduccia from the University of North Carolina, opposes the
theory that birds are related to dinosaurs, despite the fact that he is an evolutionist
himself. Feduccia has this to say regarding the thesis of reptile-bird evolution: Well,
I've studied bird skulls for 25 years and I don't see any similarities whatsoever.
I just don't see it... The theropod origins of birds, in my opinion, will be the
greatest embarrassment of paleontology of the 20th century.108 Larry
Martin, a specialist on ancient birds from the University of Kansas, also opposes
the theory that birds are descended from dinosaurs. Discussing the contradiction
that evolution falls into on the subject, he states: To
tell you the truth, if I had to support the dinosaur origin of birds with those
characters, I'd be embarrassed every time I had to get up and talk about it.109 Yet,
despite all the scientific findings, the groundless scenario of "dinosaur-bird
evolution" is still insistently advocated. Popular publications are particularly
fond of the scenario. Meanwhile, concepts which provide no backing for the scenario
are presented as evidence for "dinosaur-bird evolution." In
some evolutionist publications, for instance, emphasis is laid on the differences
among dinosaur hip bones to support the thesis that birds are descended from dinosaurs.
These so-called differences exist between dinosaurs classified as Saurischian
(reptile-like, hip-girdled species) and Ornithischian (bird-like, hip-girdled
species). This concept of dinosaurs having hip girdles similar to those of birds
is now and then taken as evidence for the alleged dinosaur-bird link. However,
the difference in hip girdles is no evidence at all for the claim that birds evolved
from dinosaurs. That is because Ornithischian dinosaurs do not resemble
birds with respect to other anatomical features. For instance, Ankylosaurus
is a dinosaur classified as Ornithischian, with short legs, a giant body,
and skin covered with scales resembling armor. On the other hand, Struthiomimus,
which resembles birds in some of its anatomical features (long legs, short forelegs,
and thin structure), is actually a Saurischian.110 In
short, the structure of the hip girdle is no evidence for an evolutionary relationship
between birds and dinosaurs. The claim that dinosaurs resemble birds because their
hip girdles are similar ignores other significant anatomical differences between
the two species which make any evolutionary link between them untenable from the
evolutionist viewpoint.
The Unique Structure of Avian Lungs
Another factor demonstrating
the impossibility of the reptile-bird evolution scenario is the structure of avian
lungs, which cannot be accounted for by evolution. In land-dwelling
creatures, air flow is bidirectional. Upon inhaling, the air travels through the
passages in the lungs (bronchial tubes), ending in tiny air sacs (alveoli). The
exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide takes place here. Then, upon exhaling, this
used air makes its way back and finds its way out of the lung by the same route. In
birds however, air is unidirectional. New air comes in one end, and the used air
goes at the other end. Thanks to special air sacs all along the passages between
them, air always flows in one direction through the avian lung. In this way, birds
are able to take in air nonstop. This satisfies birds' high energy requirements.
This highly specialized respiratory system is explained by Michael Denton in his
book A Theory in Crisis: In
the case of birds, the major bronchi break down into tiny tubes which permeate
the lung tissue. These so-called parabronchi eventually join up together again,
forming a true circulatory system so that air flows in one direction through the
lungs. ...[T]he structure of the lung in birds and the overall functioning of
the respiratory system is quite unique. No lung in any other vertebrate species
is known which in any way approaches the avian system. Moreover, it is identical
in all essential details in birds as diverse as humming birds, ostriches and hawks.111
Bird lungs function in a way that is completely contrary
to the way the lungs of land animals function. The latter inhale and exhale through
the same passages. The air in bird lungs, in contrast, passes continuously through
the lung in one direction. This is made possible by special air sacs throughout
the lung. Thanks to this system, whose details can be seen overleaf, birds breathe
nonstop. This design is peculiar to birds, which need high levels of oxygen during
flight. It is impossible for this structure to have evolved from reptile lungs,
because any creature with an "intermediate" form between the two types of lung
would be unable to breathe. |
 |

BREATHING
IN: The air which enters birds' respiratory passages goes to the lungs, and to
air sacs behind them. The air which is used is transferred to air sacs at the
front. |
 |
BREATHING
OUT: When a bird breathes out, the fresh air in the rear air sacs goes into the
lungs. With this system, the bird is able to enjoy a constant supply of fresh
air to its lungs. There are many details in this lung system, which is
shown in very simplified form in these diagrams. For instance, there are special
valves where the sacs join the lungs, which enable the air to flow in the right
direction. All of these show that there is a clear design at work here. This design
not only deals a death blow to the theory of evolution, it is also clear proof
of creation.Fresh air moves out of the rear air sacs to the lungs.Stale air is
expelled from the front air sacs. |
The important thing is that the reptile lung, with its bidirectional
air flow, could not have evolved into the bird lung with its unidirectional flow,
because it is not possible for there to have been an intermediate model between
them. In order for a creature to live, it has to keep breathing, and a reversal
of the structure of its lungs with a change of design would inevitably end in
death. According to evolution, this change must happen gradually over millions
of years, whereas a creature whose lungs do not work will die within a few minutes. Molecular
biologist Michael Denton, from the University of Otago in New Zealand, states
that it is impossible to give an evolutionary account of the avian lung:
Just how such an utterly different respiratory
system could have evolved gradually from the standard vertebrate design is fantastically
difficult to envisage, especially bearing in mind that the maintenance of respiratory
function is absolutely vital to the life of an organism to the extent that the
slightest malfunction leads to death within minutes. Just as the feather cannot
function as an organ of flight until the hooks and barbules are coadapted to fit
together perfectly, so the avian lung cannot function as an organ of respiration
until the parabronchi system which permeates it and the air sac system which guarantees
the parabronchi their air supply are both highly developed and able to function
together in a perfectly integrated manner.112
In brief, the passage from a terrestrial lung to an avian lung is impossible,
because an intermediate form would serve no purpose. Another
point that needs to be mentioned here is that reptiles have a diaphragm-type respiratory
system, whereas birds have an abdominal air sac system instead of a diaphragm.
These different structures also make any evolution between the two lung types
impossible, as John Ruben, an acknowledged authority in the field of respiratory
physiology, observes in the following passage: The
earliest stages in the derivation of the avian abdominal air sac system from a
diaphragm-ventilating ancestor would have necessitated selection for a diaphragmatic
hernia in taxa transitional between theropods and birds. Such a debilitating condition
would have immediately compromised the entire pulmonary ventilatory apparatus
and seems unlikely to have been of any selective advantage.113 Another
interesting structural design of the avian lung which defies evolution is the
fact that it is never empty of air, and thus never in danger of collapse. Michael
Denton explains the position: Just
how such a different respiratory system could have evolved gradually from the
standard vertebrate design without some sort of direction is, again, very difficult
to envisage, especially bearing in mind that the maintenance of respiratory function
is absolutely vital to the life of the organism. Moreover, the unique function
and form of the avian lung necessitates a number of additional unique adaptations
during avian development. As H. R. Dunker, one of the world's authorities in this
field, explains, because first, the avian lung is fixed rigidly to the body wall
and cannot therefore expand in volume and, second, because of the small diameter
of the lung capillaries and the resulting high surface tension of any liquid within
them, the avian lung cannot be inflated out of a collapsed state as happens in
all other vertebrates after birth. The air capillaries are never collapsed as
are the alveoli of other vertebrate species; rather, as they grow into the lung
tissue, the parabronchi are from the beginning open tubes filled with either air
or fluid.114
Parabronchial tubes, which enable
air to circulate in the right direction in birds' lungs. Each of these tubes is
just 0.5 mm. in diameter. | In other
words, the passages in birds' lungs are so narrow that the air sacs inside their
lungs cannot fill with air and empty again, as with land-dwelling creatures. If
a bird lung ever completely deflated, the bird would never be able to re-inflate
it, or would at the very least have great difficulty in doing so. For this reason,
the air sacs situated all over the lung enable a constant passage of air to pass
through, thus protecting the lungs from deflating. Of course
this system, which is completely different from the lungs of reptiles and other
vertebrates, and is based on the most sensitive equilibrium, cannot have come
about with unconscious mutations, stage by stage, as evolution maintains. This
is how Denton describes this structure of the avian lung, which again invalidates
Darwinism: The avian lung
brings us very close to answering Darwin's challenge: "If it could be demonstrated
that any complex organ existed, which could not possibly have been formed by numerous,
successive, slight modifications, my theory would absolutely break down."115
Bird Feathers and Reptile Scales
Another
impassable gulf between birds and reptiles is feathers, which are peculiar to
birds. Reptile bodies are covered with scales, and those of birds with feathers.
The hypothesis that bird feathers evolved from reptile scales is completely unfounded,
and is indeed disproved by the fossil record, as the evolutionary paleontologist
Barbara Stahl admits:
|
| REPTILE
SCALES The scales that cover reptiles' bodies
are totally different from bird feathers. Unlike feathers, scales do not extend
under the skin, but are merely a hard layer on the surface of the animal's body.
Genetically, biochemically and anatomically, scales bear no resemblance to feathers.
This great difference between the two again shows that the scenario of evolution
from reptiles to birds is unfounded. | How
[feathers] arose initially, presumably from reptiles scales, defies analysis...
It seems, from the complex construction of feathers, that their evolution from
reptilian scales would have required an immense period of time and involved a
series of intermediate structures. So far, the fossil record does not
bear out that supposition.116
The Sinosauropteryx fossil, announced
by evolutionary paleontologists to be a "feathered dinosaur," but which subsequently
turned out to be no such thing. | A.
H. Brush, a professor of physiology and neurobiology at the University of Connecticut,
accepts this reality, although he is himself an evolutionist: "Every feature from
gene structure and organization, to development, morphogenesis and tissue organization
is different [in feathers and scales]."117 Moreover, Professor
Brush examines the protein structure of bird feathers and argues that it is "unique
among vertebrates."118 There
is no fossil evidence to prove that bird feathers evolved from reptile scales.
On the contrary, feathers appear suddenly in the fossil record, Professor Brush
observes, as an "undeniably unique" character distinguishing birds.119
Besides, in reptiles, no epidermal tissue has yet been detected that provides
a starting point for bird feathers.120 Many
fossils have so far been the subject of "feathered dinosaur" speculation, but
detailed study has always disproved it. The prominent ornithologist Alan Feduccia
writes the following in an article called "On Why Dinosaurs Lacked Feathers":
Feathers are features unique to birds,
and there are no known intermediate structures between reptilian scales and feathers.
Notwithstanding speculations on the nature of the elongated scales found on such
forms as Longisquama ... as being featherlike structures, there is simply no demonstrable
evidence that they in fact are.121
The Design of Feathers
On the other hand, there is such a complex
design in bird feathers that the phenomenon can never be accounted for by evolutionary
processes. As we all know, there is a shaft that runs up the center of the feather.
Attached to the shaft are the vanes. The vane is made up of small thread-like
strands, called barbs. These barbs, of different lengths and rigidity, are what
give the bird its aerodynamic nature. But what is even more interesting is that
each barb has thousands of even smaller strands attached to them called barbules.
The barbules are connected to barbicels, with tiny microscopic hooks, called hamuli.
Each strand is hooked to an opposing strand, much like the hooks of a zipper.
THE
COMPLEX STRUCTURE OF BIRD FEATHERS
When bird feathers are studied closely,
a very delicate design emerges. There are even tinier hairs on every tiny hair,
and these have special hooks, allowing them to hold onto each other. The pictures
show progressively enlarged bird feathers. |
Just one crane feather has about 650 barbs on each of side of the
shaft. About 600 barbules branch off the barbs. Each one of these barbules are
locked together with 390 hooklets. The hooks latch together as do the teeth on
both sides of a zip. If the hooklets come apart for any reason, the bird can easily
restore the feathers to their original form by either shaking itself or by straightening
its feathers out with its beak. To claim that the complex design
in feathers could have come about by the evolution of reptile scales through chance
mutations is quite simply a dogmatic belief with no scientific foundation. Even
one of the doyens of Darwinism, Ernst Mayr, made this confession on the subject
some years ago: It is a
considerable strain on one's credulity to assume that finely balanced systems
such as certain sense organs (the eye of vertebrates, or the bird's feather) could
be improved by random mutations.122 The
design of feathers also compelled Darwin to ponder them. Moreover, the perfect
aesthetics of the peacock's feathers had made him "sick" (his own words). In a
letter he wrote to Asa Gray on April 3, 1860, he said, "I remember well the time
when the thought of the eye made me cold all over, but I have got over this stage
of complaint..." And then continued: "... and now trifling particulars of structure
often make me very uncomfortable. The sight of a feather in a peacock's tail,
whenever I gaze at it, makes me sick!"123 In
short, the enormous structural differences between bird feathers and reptile scales,
and the unbelievably complex design of feathers, clearly demonstrate the baselessness
of the claim that feathers evolved from scales.
The Archaeopteryx Misconception
In response to the question whether there is any
fossil evidence for "reptile-bird evolution," evolutionists pronounce the name
of one single creature. This is the fossil of a bird called Archaeopteryx, one
of the most widely known so-called transitional forms among the very few that
evolutionists still defend. Archaeopteryx, the so-called
ancestor of modern birds according to evolutionists, lived approximately 150 million
years ago. The theory holds that some small dinosaurs, such as Velociraptors or
Dromaeosaurs, evolved by acquiring wings and then starting to fly. Thus, Archaeopteryx
is assumed to be a transitional form that branched off from its dinosaur ancestors
and started to fly for the first time. However, the latest
studies of Archaeopteryx fossils indicate that this explanation lacks
any scientific foundation. This is absolutely not a transitional form, but an
extinct species of bird, having some insignificant differences from modern birds.
One
of the important pieces of evidence that Archaeopteryx was a flying
bird is its asymmetric feather structure. Above, one of the creature's
fossil feathers.
|
The thesis that Archaeopteryx was a "half-bird"
that could not fly perfectly was popular among evolutionist circles until not
long ago. The absence of a sternum (breastbone) in this creature was held up as
the most important evidence that this bird could not fly properly. (The sternum
is a bone found under the thorax to which the muscles required for flight are
attached. In our day, this breastbone is observed in all flying and non-flying
birds, and even in bats, a flying mammal which belongs to a very different family.)
However, the seventh Archaeopteryx fossil, which was found in 1992, disproved
this argument. The reason was that in this recently discovered fossil, the breastbone
that was long assumed by evolutionists to be missing was discovered to have existed
after all. This fossil was described in the journal Nature as follows: The
recently discovered seventh specimen of the Archaeopteryx preserves a partial,
rectangular sternum, long suspected but never previously documented. This attests
to its strong flight muscles, but its capacity for long flights is questionable. This
discovery invalidated the mainstay of the claims that Archaeopteryx was a half-bird
that could not fly properly. Morevoer, the structure
of the bird's feathers became one of the most important pieces of evidence confirming
that Archaeopteryx was a flying bird in the true sense. The asymmetric
feather structure of Archaeopteryx is indistinguishable from that of
modern birds, and indicates that it could fly perfectly well. As the eminent paleontologist
Carl O. Dunbar states, "Because of its feathers, [Archaeopteryx is] distinctly
to be classed as a bird."125 Paleontologist Robert Carroll
further explains the subject: The
geometry of the flight feathers of Archaeopteryx is identical with that of modern
flying birds, whereas nonflying birds have symmetrical feathers. The way in which
the feathers are arranged on the wing also falls within the range of modern birds…
According to Van Tyne and Berger, the relative size and shape of the wing of Archaeopteryx
are similar to that of birds that move through restricted openings in vegetation,
such as gallinaceous birds, doves, woodcocks, woodpeckers, and most passerine
birds… The flight feathers have been in stasis for at least 150 million years…126 Another
fact that was revealed by the structure of Archaeopteryx's feathers was
its warm-blooded metabolism. As was discussed above, reptiles and dinosaurs are
cold-blooded animals whose body heat fluctuates with the temperature of their
environment, rather than being homeostatically regulated. A very important function
of the feathers on birds is the maintenance of a constant body temperature. The
fact that Archaeopteryx had feathers shows that it was a real, warm-blooded
bird that needed to retain its body heat, in contrast to dinosaurs. The
Teeth and Claws of Archaeopteryx Two important points evolutionary
biologists rely on when claiming Archaeopteryx was a transitional form, are the
claws on its wings and its teeth. It is true that Archaeopteryx
had claws on its wings and teeth in its mouth, but these traits do not imply that
the creature bore any kind of relationship to reptiles. Besides, two bird species
living today, the touraco and the hoatzin, have claws which allow them to hold
onto branches. These creatures are fully birds, with no reptilian characteristics.
That is why it is completely groundless to assert that Archaeopteryx is a transitional
form just because of the claws on its wings.
Just
like Archaeopteryx, there are claw-like nails on the wings of the bird Opisthocomus
hoazin, which lives in our own time. | Neither
do the teeth in Archaeopteryx's beak imply that it is a transitional form. Evolutionists
are wrong to say that these teeth are reptilian characteristics, since teeth are
not a typical feature of reptiles. Today, some reptiles have teeth while others
do not. Moreover, Archaeopteryx is not the only bird species to possess teeth.
It is true that there are no toothed birds in existence today, but when we look
at the fossil record, we see that both during the time of Archaeopteryx and afterwards,
and even until fairly recently, a distinct group of birds existed that could be
categorised as "birds with teeth." The
most important point is that the tooth structure of Archaeopteryx and other birds
with teeth is totally different from that of their alleged ancestors, the dinosaurs.
The well-known ornithologists L. D. Martin, J. D. Stewart, and K. N. Whetstone
observed that Archaeopteryx and other similar birds have unserrated teeth with
constricted bases and expanded roots. Yet the teeth of theropod dinosaurs, the
alleged ancestors of these birds, had serrated teeth with straight roots.127
These researchers also compared the ankle bones of Archaeopteryx with those of
their alleged ancestors, the dinosaurs, and observed no similarity between them.128 Studies
by anatomists such as S. Tarsitano, M.K. Hecht, and A.D. Walker have revealed
that some of the similarities that John Ostrom and others have seen between the
limbs of Archaeopteryx and dinosaurs were in reality misinterpretations.129
For example, A.D. Walker has analyzed the ear region of Archaeopteryx
and found that it is very similar to that of modern birds.130 Furthermore,
J. Richard Hinchliffe, from the Institute of Biological Sciences of the University
of Wales, studied the anatomies of birds and their alleged reptilian ancestors
by using modern isotopic techniques and discovered that the three forelimb digits
in dinosaurs are I-II-III, whereas bird wing digits are II-III-IV. This poses
a big problem for the supporters of the Archaeopteryx-dinosaur link.131
Hinchliffe published his studies and observations in Science in 1997, where he
wrote: Doubts about homology between theropods
and bird digits remind us of some of the other problems in the "dinosaur-origin"
hypothesis. These include the following: (i) The much smaller theropod forelimb
(relative to body size) in comparison with the Archaeopteryx wing. Such small
limbs are not convincing as proto-wings for a ground-up origin of flight in the
relatively heavy dinosaurs. (ii) The rarity in theropods of the semilunate wrist
bone, known in only four species (including Deinonychus). Most theropods have
relatively large numbers of wrist elements, difficult to homologize with those
of Archaeopteryx. (iii) The temporal paradox that most theropod dinosaurs and
in particular the birdlike dromaeosaurs are all very much later in the fossil
record than Archaeopteryx. As
Hinchliffe notes, the "temporal paradox" is one of the facts that deal the fatal
blow to the evolutionist allegations about Archaeopteryx. In his book
Icons of Evolution, American biologist Jonathan Wells remarks that Archaeopteryx
has been turned into an "icon" of the theory of evolution, whereas evidence clearly
shows that this creature is not the primitive ancestor of birds. According to
Wells, one of the indications of this is that theropod dinosaurs-the alleged ancestors
of Archaeopteryx-are actually younger than Archaeopteryx: "Two-legged reptiles
that ran along the ground, and had other features one might expect in an ancestor
of Archaeopteryx, appear later."132 All these
findings indicate that Archaeopteryx was not a transitional link but
only a bird that fell into a category that can be called "toothed birds." Linking
this creature to theropod dinosaurs is completely invalid. In an article headed
"The Demise of the 'Birds Are Dinosaurs' Theory," the American biologist Richard
L. Deem writes the following about Archaeopteryx and the bird-dinosaur evolution
claim: The results of the
recent studies show that the hands of the theropod dinosaurs are derived from
digits I, II, and III, whereas the wings of birds, although they look alike in
terms of structure, are derived from digits II, III, and IV... There are other
problems with the "birds are dinosaurs" theory. The theropod forelimb is much
smaller (relative to body size) than that of Archaeopteryx. The small "proto-wing"
of the theropod is not very convincing, especially considering the rather hefty
weight of these dinosaurs. The vast majority of the theropod lack the semilunate
wrist bone, and have a large number of other wrist elements which have no homology
to the bones of Archaeopteryx. In addition, in almost all theropods, nerve V1
exits the braincase out the side, along with several other nerves, whereas in
birds, it exits out the front of the braincase, though its own hole. There is
also the minor problem that the vast majority of the theropods appeared after
the appearance of Archaeopteryx.133
Archaeopteryx and Other Ancient Bird Fossils
Some recently found fossils also
invalidate the evolutionist scenario regarding Archaeopteryx in other
respects. Lianhai Hou and Zhonghe Zhou, two
paleontologists at the Chinese Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology, discovered
a new bird fossil in 1995, and named it Confuciusornis. This fossil is almost
the same age as Archaeopteryx (around 140 million years), but has no
teeth in its mouth. In addition, its beak and feathers share the same features
as today's birds. Confuciusornis has the same skeletal structure as modern
birds, but also has claws on its wings, just like Archaeopteryx. Another
structure peculiar to birds called the "pygostyle," which supports the tail feathers,
was also found in Confuciusornis.134 In short, this fossil-which
is the same age as Archaeopteryx, which was previously thought to be
the earliest bird and was accepted as a semi-reptile-looks very much like a modern
bird. This fact has invalidated all the evolutionist theses claiming Archaeopteryx
to be the primitive ancestor of all birds.
Confuciusornis,
which lived at the same time as Archaeopteryx, has many similarities to modern
birds. | Another
fossil unearthed in China caused even greater confusion. In November 1996, the
existence of a 130-million-year-old bird named Liaoningornis was announced in
Science by L. Hou, L. D. Martin, and Alan Feduccia. Liaoningornis had a breastbone
to which the muscles for flight were attached, just as in modern birds.135
This bird was indistinguishable from modern birds in other respects, too. The
only difference was the teeth in its mouth. This showed that birds with teeth
did not possess the primitive structure alleged by evolutionists. That Liaoningornis
had the features of a modern bird was stated in an article in Discover, which
said, "Whence came the birds? This fossil suggests that it was not from dinosaur
stock."136 Another fossil
that refuted the evolutionist claims regarding Archaeopteryx was Eoalulavis.
The wing structure of Eoalulavis, which was said to be some 25 to 30 million years
younger than Archaeopteryx, was also observed in modern slow-flying birds.137
This proved that 120 million years ago, there were birds indistinguishable from
modern birds in many respects, flying in the skies. These facts
once more indicate for certain that neither Archaeopteryx nor other ancient
birds similar to it were transitional forms. The fossils do not indicate that
different bird species evolved from each other. On the contrary, the fossil record
proves that today's modern birds and some archaic birds such as Archaeopteryx
actually lived together at the same time. It is true that some of these bird species,
such as Archaeopteryx and Confuciusornis, have become extinct,
but the fact that only some of the species that once existed have been able to
survive down to the present day does not in itself support the theory of evolution.
Archaeoraptor: The Dino-Bird Hoax
Unable to find what they were looking for
in Archaeopteryx, the advocates of the theory of evolution pinned their hopes
on some other fossils in the 1990s and a series of reports of so-called "dino-bird"
fossils appeared in the world media. Yet it was soon discovered that these claims
were simply misinterpretations, or, even worse, forgeries. The
first dino-bird claim was the story of "feathered dinosaur fossils unearthed in
China," which was put forward in 1996 with a great media fanfare. A reptilian
fossil called Sinosauropteryx was found, but some paleontologists who
examined the fossil said that it had bird feathers, unlike modern reptiles. Examinations
conducted one year later, however, showed that the fossil actually had no structure
similar to a bird's feather. A Science article titled "Plucking the Feathered
Dinosaur" stated that the structures named as "feathers" by evolutionary paleontologists
definitely had nothing to do with feathers: Exactly
1 year ago, paleontologists were abuzz about photos of a so-called "feathered
dinosaur," which were passed around the halls at the annual meeting of the Society
of Vertebrate Paleontology. The Sinosauropteryx specimen from the Yixian Formation
in China made the front page of The New York Times, and was viewed by some as
confirming the dinosaurian origins of birds. But at this year's vertebrate paleontology
meeting in Chicago late last month, the verdict was a bit different: The structures
are not modern feathers, say the roughly half-dozen Western paleontologists who
have seen the specimens. ...Paleontologist Larry Martin of Kansas University,
Lawrence, thinks the structures are frayed collagenous fibers beneath the skin-and
so have nothing to do with birds.138 A
yet more sensational case of dino-bird hype broke out in 1999. In its November
1999 issue, National Geographic published an article about a fossil specimen
unearthed in China which was claimed to bear both bird and dinosaur features.
National Geographic writer Christopher P. Sloan, the author of the article,
went so far as to claim, "we can now say that birds are theropods just as confidently
as we say that humans are mammals." This species, which was said to have lived
125 million years ago, was immediately given the scientific name Archaeoraptor
liaoningensis.139

National Geographic's great
hit, the perfect "dino-bird." Archaeoraptor soon turned out to be a hoax. All
other "dino-bird" candidates remain speculative. | However,
the fossil was a fake and was skillfully constructed from five separate specimens.
A group of researchers, among whom were also three paleontologists, proved the
forgery one year later with the help of X-ray computed tomography. The dino-bird
was actually the product of a Chinese evolutionist. Chinese amateurs formed the
dino-bird by using glue and cement from 88 bones and stones. Research suggests
that Archaeoraptor was built from the front part of the skeleton of an ancient
bird, and that its body and tail included bones from four different specimens.
The interesting thing is that National
Geographic published a high-profile article about such a crude forgery-and,
moreover, used it as the basis for claiming that "bird evolution" scenarios had
been verified-without expressing any doubts or caution in the article at all.
Dr. Storrs Olson, of the famous Smithsonian Institute Natural History Museum in
the USA, later said that he warned National Geographic beforehand that this fossil
was a fake, but that the magazine management totally ignored him. According to
Olson, "National Geographic has reached an all-time low for engaging in sensationalistic,
unsubstantiated, tabloid journalism."140 In
a letter he wrote to Peter Raven of National Geographic, Olson describes the real
story of the "feathered dinosaur" hype since its launch with a previous National
Geographic article published in 1998 in a very detailed way:
Prior to the publication of the article "Dinosaurs Take Wing"
in the July 1998 National Geographic, Lou Mazzatenta, the photographer for Sloan's
article, invited me to the National Geographic Society to review his photographs
of Chinese fossils and to comment on the slant being given to the story. At that
time, I tried to interject the fact that strongly supported alternative viewpoints
existed to what National Geographic intended to present, but it eventually became
clear to me that National Geographic was not interested in anything other than
the prevailing dogma that birds evolved from dinosaurs. Sloan's
article takes the prejudice to an entirely new level and consists in large part
of unverifiable or undocumented information that "makes" the news rather than
reporting it. His bald statement that "we can now say that birds are theropods
just as confidently as we say that humans are mammals" is not even suggested as
reflecting the views of a particular scientist or group of scientists, so that
it figures as little more than editorial propagandizing. This melodramatic assertion
had already been disproven by recent studies of embryology and comparative morphology,
which, of course, are never mentioned. More importantly,
however, none of the structures illustrated in Sloan's article that are claimed
to be feathers have actually been proven to be feathers. Saying that they are
is little more than wishful thinking that has been presented as fact. The statement
on page 103 that "hollow, hairlike structures characterize protofeathers" is nonsense
considering that protofeathers exist only as a theoretical construct, so that
the internal structure of one is even more hypothetical. The
hype about feathered dinosaurs in the exhibit currently on display at the National
Geographic Society is even worse, and makes the spurious claim that there is strong
evidence that a wide variety of carnivorous dinosaurs had feathers. A model of
the undisputed dinosaur Deinonychus and illustrations of baby tyrannosaurs are
shown clad in feathers, all of which is simply imaginary and has no place outside
of science fiction. Sincerely, Storrs
L. Olson Curator of Birds National Museum of Natural History Smithsonian
Institution141 This revealing
case demonstrates two important facts. First, there are people who have no qualms
about resorting to forgery in an effort to find evidence for the theory of evolution.
Second, some highly reputable popular science journals, which have assumed the
mission of imposing the theory of evolution on people, are perfectly willing to
disregard any facts that may be inconvenient or have alternative interpretations.
That is, they have become little more than propaganda tools for propagating the
theory of evolution. They take not a scientific, but a dogmatic, stance and knowingly
compromise science to defend the theory of evolution to which they are so strongly
devoted. Another important aspect of the matter is that there
is no evidence for the thesis that birds evolved from dinosaurs. Because of the
lack of evidence, either fake evidence is produced, or actual evidence is misinterpreted.
In truth, there is no evidence that birds have evolved from another living species.
On the contrary, all discoveries show that birds emerged on the earth already
in full possession of their distinctive body structures.
LATEST
EVIDENCE: OSTRICH STUDY REFUTES THE DINO-BIRD STORY

Dr. Feduccia: His new study is enough to bury the 'dino-bird"
myth | The latest blow to the "birds evolved
from dinosaurs" theory came from a study made on the embryology of ostriches.
Drs. Alan Feduccia and Julie Nowicki of the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill studied a series of live ostrich eggs and, once again,
concluded that there cannot be an evolutionary link between birds and dinosaurs.
EurekAlert, a scientific portal held by the American Association for the The Advancement
of Science (AAAS), reports the following: Drs. Alan Feduccia
and Julie Nowicki of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill... opened
a series of live ostrich eggs at various stages of development and found what
they believe is proof that birds could not have descended from dinosaurs... Whatever
the ancestor of birds was, it must have had five fingers, not the three-fingered
hand of theropod dinosaurs," Feduccia said... "Scientists agree that dinosaurs
developed 'hands' with digits one, two and three... Our studies of ostrich embryos,
however, showed conclusively that in birds, only digits two, three and four, which
correspond to the human index, middle and ring fingers, develop, and we have pictures
to prove it," said Feduccia, professor and former chair of biology at UNC. "This
creates a new problem for those who insist that dinosaurs were ancestors of modern
birds. How can a bird hand, for example, with digits two, three and four evolve
from a dinosaur hand that has only digits one, two and three? That would be almost
impossible." 1 In the same report, Dr. Freduccia also made important
comments on the invalidity-and the shallowness-of the "birds evolved from dinosaurs"
theory: "There are insurmountable problems with that theory,"
he [Dr. Feduccia] said. "Beyond what we have just reported, there is the time
problem in that superficially bird-like dinosaurs occurred some 25 million to
80 million years after the earliest known bird, which is 150 million years old."
If one views a chicken skeleton and a dinosaur skeleton through
binoculars they appear similar, but close and detailed examination reveals many
differences, Feduccia said. Theropod dinosaurs, for example, had curved, serrated
teeth, but the earliest birds had straight, unserrated peg-like teeth. They also
had a different method of tooth implantation and replacement."2 This
evidence once again reveals that the "dino-bird" hype is just another "icon" of
Darwinism: A myth that is supported only for the sake of a dogmatic faith in the
theory. 1 - David
Williamson, "Scientist Says Ostrich Study Confirms Bird 'Hands' Unlike Those Of
Dinosaurs," EurekAlert, 14-Aug-2002, http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2002-08/uonc-sso081402.php
2 - David Williamson, "Scientist Says Ostrich Study Confirms Bird 'Hands' Unlike
Those Of Dinosaurs," EurekAlert, 14-Aug-2002, http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2002-08/uonc-sso081402.php
|
The Origin of Insects
While
discussing the origin of birds, we mentioned the cursorial theory that evolutionary
biologists propose. As we made clear then, the question of how reptiles grew wings
involves speculation about "reptiles trying to catch insects with their front
legs." According to this theory, these reptiles' forefeet slowly turned into wings
over time as they hunted for insects.
There is no difference between this
320-million-year-old fossil cockroach and specimens living today. |
We have already stressed that this theory is based on no
scientific discoveries whatsoever. But there is another interesting side to it,
which we have not yet touched on. Flies can already fly. So how did they acquire
wings? And generally speaking, what is the origin of insects, of which flies are
just one class? In the classification of
living things, insects make up a subphylum, Insecta, of the phylum Arthropoda.
The oldest insect fossils belong to the Devonian Age (410 to 360 million years
ago). In the Pennsylvanian Age which followed (325 to 286 million years ago),
there emerged a great number of different insect species. For instance, cockroaches
emerge all of a sudden, and with the same structure as they have today. Betty
Faber, of the American Museum of Natural History, reports that fossil cockroaches
from 350 million years ago are exactly the same as those of today.142 Creatures
such as spiders, ticks, and millipedes are not insects, but rather belong to other
subphyla of Arthropoda. Important fossil discoveries of these creatures were communicated
to the 1983 annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of
Science. The interesting thing about these 380-million-year-old spider, tick,
and centipede fossils is the fact that they are no different from specimens alive
today. One of the scientists who examined the fossils remarked that, "they looked
like they might have died yesterday."143 Winged
insects also emerge suddenly in the fossil record, and with all the features peculiar
to them. For example, a large number of dragonfly fossils from the Pennsylvanian
Age have been found. And these dragonflies have exactly the same structures as
their counterparts today.

| This Acantherpestes major millipede,
found in the state of Kansas in the United States, is some 300 million years old,
and no different from millipedes today. | 145-million-year-old
fossil fly. This fossil, found in Liaoning in China, is the same as flies of the
same species living today. |

Winged insects emerge all of a sudden in the fossil record, and from that moment
they have possessed the same flawless structures as today. The 320-million-year
fossil dragonfly above is the oldest known specimen and is no different from dragonflies
living today. No "evolution" has taken place.
| One
interesting point here is the fact that dragonflies and flies emerge all of a
sudden, together with wingless insects. This disproves the theory that wingless
insects developed wings and gradually evolved into flying ones. In one of their
articles in the book Biomechanics in Evolution, Robin Wootton and Charles P. Ellington
have this to say on the subject: When
insect fossils first appear, in the Middle and Upper Carboniferous, they are diverse
and for the most part fully winged. There are a few primitively wingless forms,
but no convincing intermediates are known.144 One
major characteristic of flies, which emerge all of a sudden in the fossil record,
is their amazing flying technique. Whereas a human being is unable to open and
close his arms even 10 times a second, an average fly flaps its wings 500 times
in that space of time. Moreover, it moves both its wings simultaneously. The slightest
dissonance in the vibration of its wings would cause the fly to lose balance,
but this never happens. In an article titled "The Mechanical
Design of Fly Wings," Wootton further observes: The
better we understand the functioning of insect wings, the more subtle and beautiful
their designs appear … Structures are traditionally designed to deform as little
as possible; mechanisms are designed to move component parts in predictable ways.
Insect wings combine both in one, using components with a wide range of elastic
properties, elegantly assembled to allow appropriate deformations in response
to appropriate forces and to make the best possible use of the air. They have
few if any technological parallels - yet.145 Of
course the sudden emergence of living things with such a perfect design as this
cannot be explained by any evolutionist account. That is why Pierre-Paul Grassé
says, "We are in the dark concerning the origin of insects."146
The origin of insects clearly proves the fact of creation. The
Origin of Mammals
A fossilized
fly, trapped in amber 35 million years ago. This fossil, found on the Baltic coast,
is again no different from those living in our own time. |
As we have stated before, the theory of evolution proposes
that some imaginary creatures that came out of the sea turned into reptiles, and
that birds evolved from reptiles. According to the same scenario, reptiles are
the ancestors not only of birds, but also of mammals. However, there are great
differences between these two classes. Mammals are warm-blooded animals (this
means they can generate their own heat and maintain it at a steady level), they
give live birth, they suckle their young, and their bodies are covered in fur
or hair. Reptiles, on the other hand, are cold-blooded (i.e., they cannot generate
heat, and their body temperature changes according to the external temperature),
they lay eggs, they do not suckle their young, and their bodies are covered in
scales. Given all these differences, then, how did a reptile
start to regulate its body temperature and come by a perspiratory mechanism to
allow it to maintain its body temperature? Is it possible that it replaced its
scales with fur or hair and started to secrete milk? In order for the theory of
evolution to explain the origin of mammals, it must first provide scientific answers
to these questions. Yet, when we look at evolutionist sources,
we either find completely imaginary and unscientific scenarios, or else a profound
silence. One of these scenarios is as follows: Some
of the reptiles in the colder regions began to develop a method of keeping their
bodies warm. Their heat output increased when it was cold and their heat loss
was cut down when scales became smaller and more pointed, and evolved into fur.
Sweating was also an adaptation to regulate the body temperature, a device to
cool the body when necessary by evaporation of water. But incidentally the young
of these reptiles began to lick the sweat of the mother for nourishment. Certain
sweat glands began to secrete a richer and richer secretion, which eventually
became milk. Thus the young of these early mammals had a better start in life.147 The
above quotation is nothing more than a figment of the imagination. Not only is
such a fantastic scenario unsupported by the evidence, it is clearly impossible.
It is quite irrational to claim that a living creature produces a highly complex
nutrient such as milk by licking its mother's body sweat.
There is no difference between fossil
mammals dozens of millions of years old in natural history museums and those living
today. Furthermore, these fossils emerge suddenly, with no connection to species
that had gone before. | The
reason why such scenarios are put forward is the fact that there are huge differences
between reptiles and mammals. One example of the structural barriers between
reptiles and mammals is their jaw structure. Mammal jaws consist of only
one mandibular bone containing the teeth. In reptiles, there are three little
bones on both sides of the mandible. Another basic difference is that all mammals
have three bones in their middle ear (hammer, anvil, and stirrup). Reptiles have
but a single bone in the middle ear. Evolutionists claim that the reptile jaw
and middle ear gradually evolved into the mammal jaw and ear. The question of
how an ear with a single bone evolved into one with three bones, and how the sense
of hearing kept on functioning in the meantime can never be explained. Not surprisingly,
not one single fossil linking reptiles and mammals has been found. This is why
the renowned evolutionist science writer Roger Lewin was forced to say, "The transition
to the first mammal, ...is still an enigma."148 George
Gaylord Simpson, one of the most important evolutionary authorities and a founder
of the neo-Darwinist theory, makes the following comment regarding this perplexing
difficulty for evolutionists: The most puzzling
event in the history of life on earth is the change from the Mesozoic, the Age
of Reptiles, to the Age of Mammals. It is as if the curtain were rung down suddenly
on the stage where all the leading roles were taken by reptiles, especially dinosaurs,
in great numbers and bewildering variety, and rose again immediately to reveal
the same setting but an entirely new cast, a cast in which the dinosaurs do not
appear at all, other reptiles are supernumeraries, and all the leading parts are
played by mammals of sorts barely hinted at in the preceding acts.149 Furthermore,
when mammals suddenly made their appearance, they were already very different
from each other. Such dissimilar animals as bats, horses, mice, and whales are
all mammals, and they all emerged during the same geological period. Establishing
an evolutionary relationship among them is impossible even by the broadest stretch
of the imagination. The evolutionist zoologist R. Eric Lombard makes this point
in an article that appeared in the leading journal Evolution:
Those searching for specific information
useful in constructing phylogenies of mammalian taxa will be disappointed.150 In
short, the origin of mammals, like that of other groups, fails to conform to the
theory of evolution in any way. George Gaylord Simpson admitted that fact many
years ago: This is true
of all thirty-two orders of mammals ... The earliest and most primitive known
members of every order [of mammals] already have the basic ordinal characters,
and in no case is an approximately continuous sequence from one order to another
known. In most cases the break is so sharp and the gap so large that the origin
of the order is speculative and much disputed ... This regular absence of transitional
forms is not confined to mammals, but is an almost universal phenomenon, as has
long been noted by paleontologists. It is true of almost all classes of animals,
both vertebrate and invertebrate...it is true of the classes, and of the major
animal phyla, and it is apparently also true of analogous categories of plants.151
The Myth of Horse Evolution
One important subject in the origin
of mammals is the myth of the "evolution of the horse," also a topic to which
evolutionist publications have devoted a considerable amount of space for a long
time. This is a myth, because it is based on imagination rather than scientific
findings. Until recently, an imaginary sequence supposedly showing
the evolution of the horse was advanced as the principal fossil evidence for the
theory of evolution. Today, however, many evolutionists themselves frankly admit
that the scenario of horse evolution is bankrupt. In 1980, a four-day symposium
was held at the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago, with 150 evolutionists
in attendance, to discuss the problems with the gradualistic evolutionary theory.
In addressing this meeting, evolutionist Boyce Rensberger noted that the scenario
of the evolution of the horse has no foundation in the fossil record, and that
no evolutionary process has been observed that would account for the gradual evolution
of horses: The popularly
told example of horse evolution, suggesting a gradual sequence of changes
from four-toed fox-sized creatures living nearly 50 million years ago to today's
much larger one-toed horse, has long been known to be wrong. Instead of gradual
change, fossils of each intermediate species appear fully distinct, persist unchanged,
and then become extinct. Transitional forms are unknown.152 While
discussing this important dilemma in the scenario of the evolution of the horse
in a particularly honest way, Rensberger brought the transitional form difficulty
onto the agenda as the greatest difficulty of all.
Dr. Niles Eldredge, a curator at the American Museum in New
York, , where "evolution of the horse" diagrams were on public
display at that time on the ground floor of the museum, said the following
about the exhibition:
There have been an awful lot of stories,
some more imaginative than others, about what the nature of that history
[of life] really is. The most famous example, still on exhibit downstairs,
is the exhibit on horse evolution prepared perhaps fifty years ago.
That has been presented as the literal truth in textbook after textbook.
Now I think that is lamentable, particularly when the people who propose
those kinds of stories may themselves be aware of the speculative nature
of some of that stuff. 153
Then
what is the basis for the scenario of the evolution of the horse? This scenario
was formulated by means of the deceitful charts devised by the sequential arrangement
of fossils of distinct species that lived at vastly different periods in India,
South Africa, North America, and Europe, solely in accordance with the rich power
of evolutionists' imaginations. More than 20 charts of the evolution of the horse,
which by the way are totally different from each other, have been proposed by
various researchers. Thus, it is obvious that evolutionists have reached no common
agreement on these family trees. The only common feature in these arrangements
is the belief that a dog-sized creature called Eohippus (Hyracotherium), which
lived in the Eocene period 55 million years ago, was the ancestor of the horse.
However, the fact is that Eohippus, which became extinct millions of years ago,
is nearly identical to the hyrax, a small rabbit-like animal which still lives
in Africa and has nothing whatsoever to do with the horse.154 The
inconsistency of the theory of the evolution of the horse becomes increasingly
apparent as more fossil findings are gathered. Fossils of modern horse species
(Equus nevadensis and Equus occidentalis) have been discovered in the same layer
as Eohippus.155 This is an indication that the modern horse
and its so-called ancestor lived at the same time.
The Evolution of the Horse exhibition
in London's Natural History Museum. This and other "evolution of the horse" diagrams
show independent species which lived at different times and in different places,
lined up one after the other in a very subjective presentation. In reality, there
are no scientific discoveries regarding the evolution of the horse. |
The evolutionist science writer Gordon R. Taylor explains
this little-acknowledged truth in his book The Great Evolution Mystery:
But perhaps the most serious weakness of
Darwinism is the failure of paleontologists to find convincing phylogenies or
sequences of organisms demonstrating major evolutionary change... The horse is
often cited as the only fully worked-out example. But the fact is that
the line from Eohippus to Equus is very erratic. It is alleged to show
a continual increase in size, but the truth is that some variants were smaller
than Eohippus, not larger. Specimens from different sources can be brought together
in a convincing-looking sequence, but there is no evidence that they were actually
ranged in this order in time.156 All
these facts are strong evidence that the charts of horse evolution, which are
presented as one of the most solid pieces of evidence for Darwinism, are nothing
but fantastic and implausible fairy tales. Like other species, horses, too, came
into existence without ancestors in the evolutionary sense.
The Origin of Bats
One of the most interesting creatures in the
mammalian class is without doubt the flying mammal, the bat.
Bats'
sonar system is more sensitive and efficient than any technological sonar systems
so far constructed. | Topping the
list of the characteristics of bats is the complex "sonar" system they possess.
Thanks to this, bats can fly in the pitch dark, unable to see anything, but performing
the most complicated maneuvers. They can even sense and catch a caterpillar on
the floor of a dark room. Bat sonar works in the following way.
The animal emits a continuous stream of high-frequency sonic signals, analyses
the echoes from these, and as a result forms a detailed image of its surroundings.
What is more, it manages to do all of this at an incredible speed, continually
and unerringly, while it is flying through the air. Research
into the bat sonar system has produced even more surprising results. The range
of frequencies the animal can perceive is very narrow; in other words it can only
hear sounds of certain frequencies, which raises a very important point. Since
sounds which strike a body in motion change their frequency (the well-known "Doppler
effect"), as a bat sends out signals to a fly, say, that is moving away from it,
the sound waves reflected from the fly should be at a different frequency that
the bat is unable to perceive. For this reason, the bat should have great difficulty
in sensing moving bodies. But this is not the case. The bat
continues to catch all kinds of small, fast-moving creatures with no difficulty
at all. The reason is that the bat adjusts the frequency of the sound waves it
sends out toward the moving bodies in its environment as if it knew all about
the Doppler effect. For instance, it emits its highest-frequency signal toward
a fly that is moving away from it, so that when the signal comes back, its frequency
has not dropped below the threshold of the animal's hearing. So
how does this adjustment take place? There are two groups of
neurons (nerve cells) in the bat's brain which control the sonar system. One of
these perceives the echoed ultrasound, and the other gives instructions to the
muscles to produce echolocation calls. These regions in the brain work in tandem,
in such a way that when the frequency of the echo changes, the first region perceives
this, and warns the second one, enabling it to modify the frequency of the sound
emitted in accordance with that of the echo. As a result, the pitch of the bat's
ultrasound changes according to its surroundings, and sonar system as a whole
is used in the most efficient manner.
The oldest known fossil bat, found
in Wyoming in the United States. 50 million years old, there is no difference
between this fossil and bats alive today. |
It is impossible to be blind to the mortal blow that the bat sonar
system deals to the theory of gradual evolution through chance mutations. It is
an extremely complex structure, and can in no way be accounted for by chance mutations.
In order for the system to function at all, all of its components have to work
together perfectly as an integrated whole. It is absurd to believe that such a
highly integrated system can be explained by chance; on the contrary, it actually
demonstrates that the bat is flawlessly created. In fact, the
fossil record also confirms that bats emerged suddenly and with today's complex
structures. In their book Bats: A Natural History, the evolutionary paleontologists
John E. Hill and James D. Smith reveal this fact in the form of the following
admission: The fossil record
of bats extends back to the early Eocene ... and has been documented ... on five
continents ... [A]ll fossil bats, even the oldest, are clearly fully developed
bats and so they shed little light on the transition from their terrestrial ancestor.157 And
the evolutionary paleontologist L. R. Godfrey has this to say on the same subject:
There are some remarkably well preserved
early Tertiary fossil bats, such as Icaronycteris index, but Icaronycteris tells
us nothing about the evolution of flight in bats because it was a perfectly good
flying bat.158 Evolutionist
scientist Jeff Hecht confesses the same problem in a 1998 New Scientist article:
[T]he origins of bats have been a puzzle.
Even the earliest bat fossils, from about 50 million years ago, have wings that
closely resemble those of modern bats.159 In
short, bats' complex bodily systems cannot have emerged through evolution, and
the fossil record demonstrates that no such thing happened. On the contrary, the
first bats to have emerged in the world are exactly the same as those of today.
Bats have always existed as bats.
The Origin of Marine Mammals

Marine
mammals possess systems which are entirely peculiar to themselves. These are designed
in the best way for the environment they live in. | Whales
and dolphins belong to the order of marine mammals known as Cetacea. These creatures
are classified as mammals because, just like land-dwelling mammals, they give
live birth to their young and nurse them, they have lungs to breathe with, and
they regulate their body temperature. For evolutionists, the origin of marine
mammals has been one of the most difficult issues to explain. In many evolutionist
sources, it is asserted that the ancestors of cetaceans left the land and evolved
into marine mammals over a long period of time. Accordingly, marine mammals followed
a path contrary to the transition from water to land, and underwent a second evolutionary
process, returning to the water. This theory both lacks paleontological evidence
and is self-contradictory. Thus, evolutionists have been silenced on this issue
for a long time. However, an evolutionist hype about the origin
of marine mammals broke out in the 90's, argued to be based on some new fossil
findings of the 80's like Pakicetus and Ambulocetus. These evidently quadrupedal
and terrestrial extinct mammals were alleged to be the ancestors of whales and
thus many evolutionist sources did not hesitate to call them "walking whales."
(In fact the full name, Ambulocetus natans, means "walking and swimming whale.")
Popular means of evolutionist indoctrination further vulgarized the story. National
Geographic in its November 2001 issue, finally declared the full evolutionist
scenario on the "Evolution of Whales." Nevertheless, the scenario
was based on evolutionist prejudice, not scientific evidence.
The Myth of the Walking Whale
Fossil remains of the extinct mammal
Pakicetus inachus, to give it its proper name, first came onto the agenda in 1983.
P. D. Gingerich and his assistants, who found the fossil, had no hesitation in
immediately claiming that it was a "primitive whale," even though they actually
only found a skull. Yet the fossil has absolutely no connection
with the whale. Its skeleton turned out to be a four-footed structure, similar
to that of common wolves. It was found in a region full of iron ore, and containing
fossils of such terrestrial creatures as snails, tortoises, and crocodiles. In
other words, it was part of a land stratum, not an aquatic one. So,
why was a quadrupedal land dweller announced to be a "primitive whale" and why
is it still presented as such by evolutionist sources like National Geographic?
The magazine gives the following reply: What
causes scientists to declare the creature a whale? Subtle clues in combination-the
arrangement of cusps on the molar teeth, a folding in a bone of the middle ear,
and the positioning of the ear bones within the skull-are absent in other land
mammals but a signature of later Eocene whales.160 In
other words, based on some details in its teeth and ear bones, National Geographic
felt able to describe this quadrupedal, wolf-like land dweller as a "walking whale."
These features, however, are not compelling evidence on which to base a link between
Pakicetus and the whale: - As National Geographic also indirectly
stated while writing "subtle clues in combination," some of these features are
actually found in terrestrial animals as well.
Distortions
in the Reconstructions of National Geographic
 |
Paleontologists
believe that Pakicetus was a quadrupedal mammal. The skeletal structure on the
left, published in the Nature magazine clearly demonstrates this. Thus the reconstruction
of Pakicetus (below left) by Carl Buell, which was based on that structure, is
realistic. |
 |
National
Geographic, however, opted to use a picture of a "swimming" Pakicetus (below)
in order to portray the animal as a "walking whale" and to impose that image on
its readers. The inconsistencies in the picture, intended to make Pakicetus seem
more "whale-like," are immediately obvious: The animal has been portrayed in a
"swimming" position. Its hind legs are shown stretching out backwards, and an
impression of "fins" has been given. |
 |
Pakicetus reconstruction by National Geographic. |
 |
National
Geographic's Ambulocetus: The animal's rear legs are shown not with feet that
would help it to walk, but as fins that would assist it to swim. However, Carroll,
who examines the animal's leg bones, says that it possessed the ability to move
powerfully on land. |
 |
The
real Ambulocetus : The legs are real legs, not "fins," and there are no imaginary
webs between its toes such as National Geographic had added. (Picture from Carroll,
Patterns and Processes of Vertebrate Evolution, p. 335) |
| - None of the features
in question are any evidence of an evolutionary relationship. Even evolutionists
admit that most of the theoretical relationships built on the basis of anatomical
similarities between animals are completely untrustworthy. If the marsupial Tasmanian
wolf and the common placental wolf had both been extinct for a long time, then
there is no doubt that evolutionists would picture them in the same taxon and
define them as very close relatives. However, we know that these two different
animals, although strikingly similar in their anatomy, are very far from each
other in the supposed evolutionary tree of life. (In fact their similarity indicates
common design-not common descent.) Pakicetus, which evolutionists declare to be
a "walking whale," was a unique species harboring different features in its body.
In fact, Carroll, an authority on vertebrate paleontology, describes the Mesonychid
family, of which Pakicetus should be a member, as "exhibiting an odd combination
of characters."161 In his article "The Overselling
of Whale Evolution," the creationist writer Ashby L. Camp reveals the total invalidity
of the claim that the Mesonychid class, which should include land mammals such
as Pakicetus, could have been the ancestors of Archaeocetea, or extinct whales,
in these words: The reason
evolutionists are confident that mesonychids gave rise to archaeocetes, despite
the inability to identify any species in the actual lineage, is that known mesonychids
and archaeocetes have some similarities. These similarities, however, are not
sufficient to make the case for ancestry, especially in light of the vast differences.
The subjective nature of such comparisons is evident from the fact so many groups
of mammals and even reptiles have been suggested as ancestral to whales.162 The
second fossil creature after Pakicetus in the scenario on whale origins is Ambulocetus
natans. It is actually a land creature that evolutionists have insisted on turning
into a whale. The name Ambulocetus natans comes from the Latin
words "ambulare" (to walk), "cetus" (whale) and "natans" (swimming), and means
"a walking and swimming whale." It is obvious the animal used to walk because
it had four legs, like all other mammals, and even wide claws on its feet and
paws on its hind legs. Apart from evolutionists' prejudice, however, there is
absolutely no basis for the claim that it swam in water, or that it lived on land
and in water (like an amphibian). After Pakicetus and Ambulocetus,
the evolutionist plan moves on to so-called sea mammals and sets out (extinct
whale) species such as Procetus, Rodhocetus, and Archaeocetea. The animals in
question were mammals that lived in the sea and which are now extinct. (We shall
be touching on this matter later.) However, there are considerable anatomical
differences between these and Pakicetus and Ambulocetus. When we look at the fossils,
it is clear they are not "transitional forms" linking each other: -
The backbone of the quadrupedal mammal Ambulocetus ends at the pelvis, and powerful
rear legs then extend from it. This is typical land-mammal anatomy. In whales,
however, the backbone goes right down to the tail, and there is no pelvic bone
at all. In fact, Basilosaurus, believed to have lived some 10 million years after
Ambulocetus, possesses the latter anatomy. In other words, it is a typical whale.
There is no transitional form between Ambulocetus, a typical land mammal, and
Basilosaurus, a typical whale. - Under the
backbone of Basilosaurus and the sperm whale, there are small bones independent
of it. National Geographic claims these to be vestigial legs. Yet that same magazine
mentions that these bones actually had another function. In Basilosaurus, these
bones functioned as copulary guides and in sperm whales "[act] as an anchor for
the muscles of the genitalia."163 To describe these bones,
which actually carry out important functions, as "vestigial organs" is nothing
but Darwinistic prejudice. In conclusion,
despite evolutionist propaganda, the fact that there were no transitional forms
between land and sea mammals and that they both emerged with their own particular
features has not changed. There is no evolutionary link. Robert Carroll accepts
this, albeit unwillingly and in evolutionist language: "It is not possible to
identify a sequence of mesonychids leading directly to whales."164 Although
he is an evolutionist, the famous Russian whale expert G. A. Mchedlidze, too,
does not support the description of Pakicetus, Ambulocetus natans, and similar
four-legged creatures as "possible ancestors of the whale," and describes them
instead as a completely isolated group.165
Problems With Superficial Sequences
Alongside the facts we have discussed
above, the dates ascribed by National Geographic to the species in question have
been selected in line with Darwinist prejudices. The animals are shown as following
each other in a geological line, whereas these are questionable. Ashby L. Camp
clarifies the situation, based on paleontological data: In
the standard scheme, Pakicetus inachus is dated to the late Ypresian, but several
experts acknowledge that it may date to the early Lutetian. If the younger date
(early Lutetian) is accepted, then Pakicetus is nearly, if not actually, contemporaneous
with Rodhocetus, an early Lutetian fossil from another formation in Pakistan.
Moreover, the date of Ambulocetus, which was found in the same formation as Pakicetus
but 120 meters higher, would have to be adjusted upward the same amount as Pakicetus.
This would make Ambulocetus younger than Rodhocetus and possibly younger than
Indocetus and even Protocetus.166 In
brief, there are two different views of when the animals that National Geographic
chronologically sets out one after the other really lived. If the second view
is accepted, then Pakicetus and Ambulocetus, which National Geographic portrays
as "the walking whale," are of the same age as, or even younger than, true whales.
In other words, no "evolutionary line" is possible.
The Surprisingly Lamarckian Superstitions of Evolutionists
Another
very important issue on the origin of marine mammals is the great anatomical and
physiological differences between them and their alleged terrestrial ancestors.
Evolutionists assume that step-by-step processes were at work for all the necessary
transitions, but this is an absurd idea since many of the systems in discussion
are irreducibly complex structures that could not form by successive stages. Let
us consider just one case: the ear structure. Like us, land mammals trap sounds
from the outside world in the outer ear, amplify them with the bones in the middle
ear, and turn them into signals in the inner ear. Marine mammals have no outer
ear. They hear sounds by means of vibration-sensitive receptors in their lower
jaws. The crucial point is that any evolution by stages between one perfect aural
system to a completely different one is impossible. The transitional phases would
not be advantageous. An animal that slowly loses its ability to hear with its
ears, but has still not developed the ability to hear through its jaw, is at a
disadvantage. The question of how such a "development" could
come about is an insoluble dilemma for evolutionists. The mechanisms evolutionists
put forward are mutations and these have never been seen to add unequivocally
new and meaningful information to animals' genetic information. It is unreasonable
to suggest that the complex hearing system in sea mammals could have emerged as
the result of mutations. But evolutionists do believe in this
unreasonable scenario and this problem stems from a kind of superstition about
the origin of living things. This superstition is the magical "natural force"
that allows living things to acquire the organs, biological changes, or anatomical
features that they need. Let us have a look at a few interesting passages from
National Geographic's article "Evolution of Whales": …I
tried to visualize some of the varieties of whale ancestors that had been found
here and nearby... As the rear limbs dwindled, so did the hip bones that supported
them. That made the spinal column more flexible to power the developing tail flukes.
The neck shortened, turning the leading end of the body into more of a tubular
hull to plow through the water with minimum drag, while arms assumed the shape
of rudders. Having little need for outer ears any longer, some whales were receiving
waterborne sounds directly through their lower jawbones and transmitting them
to the inner ears via special fat pads. Each whale in the sequence was a little
more streamlined than earlier models and roamed farther from shore.167 On
close inspection, in this whole account the evolutionist mentality says that living
things feel changing needs according to the changing environment they live in,
and this need is perceived as an "evolutionary mechanism." According to this logic,
less needed organs disappear, and needed organs appear of their own accord! Anyone
with the slightest knowledge of biology will know that our needs do not shape
our organs. Ever since Lamarck's theory of the transfer of acquired characteristics
to subsequent generations was disproved, in other words for a century or so, that
has been a known fact. Yet when one looks at evolutionist publications, they still
seem to be thinking along Lamarckian lines. If you object, they will say: "No,
we do not believe in Lamarck. What we say is that natural conditions put evolutionary
pressure on living things, and that as a result of this, appropriate traits are
selected, and in this way species evolve." Yet here lies the critical point: What
evolutionists call "evolutionary pressure" cannot lead to living things acquiring
new characteristics according to their needs. That is because the two so-called
evolutionary mechanisms that supposedly respond to this pressure, natural selection
and mutation, cannot provide new organs for animals: - Natural
selection can only select characteristics that already exist, it cannot create
new ones. - Mutations cannot add to the genetic information,
they can only destroy the existing one. No mutation that adds unequivocally new,
meaningful information to the genome (and which thus forms a new organ or new
biochemical structure) has ever been observed. If we look at
the myth of National Geographic's awkwardly moving whales one more time in the
light of this fact, we see that they are actually engaging in a rather primitive
Lamarckism. On close inspection, National Geographic writer Douglas H. Chadwick
"visualizes" that "Each whale in the sequence was a little more streamlined than
earlier models." How could a morphological change happen in a species over generations
in one particular direction? In order for that to happen, representatives of that
species in every "sequence" would have to undergo mutations to shorten their legs,
that mutation would have to cause the animals no harm, those thus mutants would
have to enjoy an advantage over normal ones, the next generations, by a great
coincidence, would have to undergo the same mutation at the same point in its
genes, this would have to carry on unchanged for many generations, and all of
the above would have to happen by chance and quite flawlessly. If
the National Geographic writers believe that, then they will also believe someone
who says: "My family enjoys flying. My son underwent a mutation and a few structures
like bird feathers developed under his arms. My grandson will undergo the same
mutation and the feathers will increase. This will go on for generations, and
eventually my descendants will have wings and be able to fly." Both stories are
equally ridiculous. As we mentioned at the beginning, evolutionists
display the superstition that living things' needs can be met by a magical force
in nature. Ascribing consciousness to nature, a belief encountered in animist
cultures, is interestingly rising up before our eyes in the 21st century under
a "scientific" cloak. Henry Gee, the editor of Nature and an undisputedly prominent
evolutionist, points to the same fact and admits that explaining the origin of
an organ by its necessity is like saying; ...
our noses were made to carry spectacles, so we have spectacles. Yet evolutionary
biologists do much the same thing when they interpret any structure in terms of
adaptation to current utility while failing to acknowledge that current utility
needs tell us nothing about how a structure evolved, or indeed how the evolutionary
history of a structure might itself have influenced the shape and properties of
that structure.168
The Unique Structures of Marine Mammals
To see the impossibility
of the evolutionist scenario on the marine mammals, let us briefly examine some
other unique features of these animals. When the adaptations a land-dwelling mammal
has to undergo in order to evolve into a marine mammal are considered, even the
word "impossible" seems inadequate. During such a transition, if even of one of
the intermediary stages failed to happen, the creature would be unable to survive,
which would put an end to the entire process. The adaptations that marine mammals
must undergo during the transition to water are as follows: 1-
Water-retention: Unlike other marine animals, marine mammals cannot use
sea water to meet their water needs. They need fresh water to survive. Though
we have limited information about the freshwater resources of marine mammals,
it is believed that they feed on organisms containing a relatively low proportion
of salt (about one third that of sea water). Thus, for marine mammals the retention
of water in their bodies is crucial. That is why they have a water retention mechanism
similar to that of camels. Like camels, marine mammals do not sweat; however,
their kidneys are perfectly functional, producing highly concentrated urine that
enables the animal to save water. In this way, water loss is reduced to a minimum.
Design for water retention can be seen even in minor details.
For instance, the mother whale feeds her baby with a concentrated form of milk
similar to cheese. This milk contains ten times more fat than human milk. There
are a number of chemical reasons why this milk is so rich in fat. Water is released
as the young whale digests the milk. In this way, the mother meets the young whale's
water needs with minimum water loss. 2- Sight and communication:
The eyes of dolphins and whales enable them to have acute eyesight in
different environments. They have perfect eyesight in water as well as out. Yet
most living things, including man, have poor eyesight out of their natural environments.
The eyes of marine and land-dwelling mammals are astonishingly
elaborate. On land, the eyes face a number of potential dangers. That is why the
eyes of land-dwelling animals have lids to protect them. In the ocean, the greatest
threats to the eye come from the high level of salt and the pressure from currents.
To avoid direct contact with the currents, the eyes are located on the sides of
the head. In addition to this, a hard layer protects the eyes of creatures which
dive to great depths. The eyes of marine mammals are equipped with elaborate features
enabling them to see at depths where there is little light. For example, their
lenses are perfectly circular in shape, while in their retinas, rods (the cells
sensitive to light) outnumber cones (the cells sensitive to colours and details).
Furthermore, the eyes of cetaceans also contain a phosphorus layer, which also
helps them see particularly well in the dark. Even so, however,
sight is not most important sensory modality of marine mammals. They rely more
on their sense of hearing than is typically the case with land-dwelling mammals.
Light is essential for sight, whereas hearing requires no such assistance. Many
whales and dolphins hunt at a depth where it is completely dark, by means of a
sonar mechanism they possess. Toothed whales, in particular, "see" by means of
sound waves. Just as happens with light waves in the visual system, sound waves
are focused and then analyzed and interpreted in the brain. This gives the cetacean
accurate information regarding the shape, size, speed and position of the object
in front of it. This sonic system is extremely sensitive-for instance, a dolphin
can sense a person jumping into the sea. Sound waves are also used for determining
direction and for communication. For example, two whales hundreds of kilometers
apart can communicate via sound. The question of how these
animals produce the sounds that enable them to determine direction or to communicate
is still largely unresolved. As far as we know, one particular feature in the
dolphin's body deserves particular attention: namely, the animal's skull is insulated
against sound, a feature that protects the brain from continuous and intensive
noise bombardment. Let us now consider the question: Is it
possible that all these astonishing features in marine mammals came into existence
by means of natural selection and mutation? What mutation could result in the
dolphin's body's coming to possess a sonar system and a brain insulated from sound?
What kind of mutation could enable its eye to see in dark water? What mutation
could lead to the mechanism that allows the most economic use of water? There
is no end to such questions, and evolution has no answer to any of them. Instead,
the theory of evolution makes do with an unbelievable story. Consider all the
coincidences that this story involves in the case of marine mammals. First of
all, fish just happened to come into existence in the water. Next, they made the
transition to land by pure chance. Following this, they evolved on the land into
reptiles and mammals, also by chance alone. Finally, it just so happened that
some of these creatures returned to the water where by chance they acquired all
the features they would need to survive there. Can the theory
of evolution prove even a single one of these stages? Certainly not. Far from
being able to prove the claim as a whole, the theory of evolution is unable to
demonstrate how even one of these different steps could have happened.
The Marine Mammal Scenario Itself
We have
so far examined the evolutionist scenario that marine mammals evolved from terrestrial
ones. Scientific evidence shows no relationship between the two terrestrial mammals
(Pakicetus and Ambulocetus) that evolutionists put at the beginning of the story.
So what about the rest of the scenario? The theory of evolution is again in a
great difficulty here. The theory tries to establish a phylogenetic link between
Archaeocetea (archaic whales), sea mammals known to be extinct, and living whales
and dolphins. However, evolutionary paleontologist Barbara J. Stahl admits that;
"the serpentine form of the body and the peculiar serrated cheek teeth make it
plain that these archaeocetes could not possibly have been ancestral to any of
the modern whales."169 The evolutionist
account of the origin of marine mammals faces a huge impasse in the form of discoveries
in the field of molecular biology. The classical evolutionist scenario assumes
that the two major whale groups, the toothed whales (Odontoceti) and the baleen
whales (Mysticeti), evolved from a common ancestor. Yet Michel Milinkovitch of
the University of Brussels has opposed this view with a new theory. He stresses
that this assumption, based on anatomical similarities, is disproved by molecular
discoveries: Evolutionary
relationships among the major groups of cetaceans is more problematic since morphological
and molecular analyses reach very different conclusions. Indeed, based on the
conventional interpretation of the morphological and behavioral data set, the
echolocating toothed whales (about 67 species) and the filter-feeding baleen whales
(10 species) are considered as two distinct monophyletic groups... On the other
hand, phylogenetic analysis of DNA... and amino acid... sequences contradict this
long-accepted taxonomic division. One group of toothed whales, the sperm whales,
appear to be more closely related to the morphologically highly divergent baleen
whales than to other odontocetes.170 In
short, marine mammals defy the evolutionary scenarios which they are being forced
to fit. Contrary to the claims of the paleontologist Hans Thewissen,
who assumes a major role in evolutionist propaganda on the origin of marine mammals,
we are dealing not with an evolutionary process backed up by empirical evidence,
but by evidence coerced to fit a presupposed evolutionary family tree, despite
the many contradictions between the two. What emerges,
if the evidence is looked at more objectively, is that different living groups
emerged independently of each other in the past. This is compelling empirical
evidence for accepting that all of these creatures were created.
| THE
GREAT MORPHOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES BETWEEN ANIMALS WHICH ARE CLAIMED TO HAVE
DESCENDED FROM ONE ANOTHER So
far, we have seen that different species emerged on earth with no evolutionary
"intermediate forms" between them. They appear in the fossil record with such
great differences that it is impossible to establish any evolutionary connection
between them. When we compare their skeletal
structures, this fact can once again clearly be seen. Animals which are alleged
to be evolutionary relatives differ enormously. We shall now examine some examples
of these. All the drawings have been taken from evolutionist sources by experts
on vertebrates. (As also contrasted by Michael Denton in his Evolution:A Theory
in Crisis, 1986)
Two different
species of marine reptiles, and the land animal that evolutionists claim is their
nearest ancestor. Take note of the great differences between them.

The marine reptile Mesosaurus, alleged to have evolved from Hylonomus.

The marine reptile Ichthyosaurus, alleged to have evolved from Hylonomus.

Hylonomus, the oldest known marine reptile.
|
The
oldest known bird (Archaeopteryx), a flying reptile, and a land reptile that evolutionists
claim to have been these creatures' closest ancestor. The differences between
them are very great.

1. Archaeopteryx, the oldest known bird. 2. Dimorphodon, one of
the oldest known flying reptiles, a typical representative of this group.
3. The land reptile Euparkeria, claimed by many evolutionist authorities to be
the ancestor of birds and flying reptiles.
|
The oldest known bat, and what evolutionists
claim is its closest ancestor. Note the great difference between the bat and its
so-called ancestor.

1. The skeleton of the oldest known bat (Icaronycteris) from the Eocene. 2.A
modern shrew, which closely resembles the ancient insectivores claimed to be the
ancestors of bats. |
Plesiosaurus, the oldest known marine reptile,
and its nearest terrestrial relative according to evolutionists. There is no resemblance
between the two.

1. The oldest known Plesiosaurus skeleton 2.
Skeleton of Araeoscelis, a Lower Permian reptile. |
An early
whale and what evolutionists claim to be its closest ancestor. Note that there
is no resemblance between them. Even the best candidate that evolutionists have
found for being the ancestor of whales has nothing to do with them.
1.A
typical example of the oldest known whales, Zygorhiza kochii,
from the Eocene.
2.
The ancestors of the whale are a subject of debate among evolutionist authorities,
but some of them have decided on Ambulocetus. To the side is Ambulocetus, a typical
tetrapod. |
A typical seal skeleton, and what evolutionists believe to
be its nearest land-dwelling ancestor. Again, there is a huge difference between
the two.

1. Skeleton of modern seal, virtually identical to the earliest known seals
of the Miocene era.
2. Cynodictis
gregarius, the land-dwelling carnivorous mammal which evolutionists believe to
have been seals' closest ancestor. |
A
sea cow, and what evolutionists call its nearest terrestrial ancestor. | | |