To: finnman69
"If anyone does not believe in Darwinism, i'll take them on a tour in the Museum of Natural History and explain it."
Great let me know where the "life was created by nothing" is located because I would like to see that exhibit. Or if that is being cleaned and not available please direct me to the "Evolutionary Intermediary Species Location" because I have yet to find one of those either.
These damn facts just seem to be getting in the way of Darwinist theory - damn it all. Please help this creationist understand how it all took place. Thanks
102 posted on
09/27/2006 11:20:47 AM PDT by
sasafras
(("Licentiousness destroyes order, and when chaos ensues, the yearning for order will destroy freedom)
To: sasafras
Great let me know where the "life was created by nothing" is located because I would like to see that exhibit. Or if that is being cleaned and not available please direct me to the "Evolutionary Intermediary Species Location" because I have yet to find one of those either.
Sure thing. It's all here. you really should go, spend an entire day, and really understand the history of our planet.
http://amnh.org/exhibitions/permanent/bio/
online tour for you here
http://amnh.org/exhibitions/hall_tour/spectrum/flash/
http://amnh.org/exhibitions/permanent/other/evolution.htmlhttp://amnh.org/exhibitions/hall_hilites/hall1.html
plus my favorite exhibits
minerals and gems, wanna see a 2 billion year old 563-carat Saphire diamond?
http://amnh.org/exhibitions/permanent/other/minerals.html
how about some 400 million year old fossils, or a 70 million YO T-rex
http://amnh.org/exhibitions/permanent/fossilhalls/ timelines
And my favorite head spinning WHOA exhibit, the cosmic pathway, illustrating comic relative sizes, distances, and timelines to scale. FYI, if the 13 billion years histor of the Universe is laid out to scale on their ramped 360 foot exhibit, human existence is the width of a human hair.
http://amnh.org/rose/cosmic-moreinfo.html http://amnh.org/exhibitions/permanent/fossilhalls/timelines/
128 posted on
09/27/2006 11:56:16 AM PDT by
finnman69
(cum puella incedit minore medio corpore sub quo manifestu s globus, inflammare animos)
To: sasafras
Great let me know where the "life was created by nothing" is located because I would like to see that exhibit.
The theory of evolution neither states nor implies that "life was created by nothing", thus your request makes no sense.
Or if that is being cleaned and not available please direct me to the "Evolutionary Intermediary Species Location" because I have yet to find one of those either.
Then you apparently have not
sought them out.
133 posted on
09/27/2006 12:03:38 PM PDT by
Dimensio
(http://angryflower.com/bobsqu.gif <-- required reading before you use your next apostrophe!)
To: sasafras
another great exhibit
http://www.amnh.org/education/resources/programs/origins/
Has the universe always existed? How did the Earth become a place that could harbor life? Are we alone in the universe, or does life exist on other planets? These questions and their startling new answers are presented in the four-part NOVA miniseries Origins, hosted by astrophysicist Neil de Grasse Tyson, Director of the Hayden Planetarium here at the American Museum of Natural History.
Origins takes the viewer on a cosmic journey to the beginning of time and into the distant reaches of the universe, searching for life's first stirrings and its traces on other worlds.
Viewers can enhance and extend their understanding of the information presented in Origins in their home or classroom with this Special Collection of resources. It includes articles, video animations, interactives, and student materials related to each episode, as well as additional resources.
http://www.amnh.org/education/resources/programs/origins/life.php#
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/origins/
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/origins/knoll.html
What are the origins of life? How did things go from non-living to living? From something that could not reproduce to something that could? One person who has exhaustively investigated this subject is paleontologist Andrew Knoll, a professor of biology at Harvard and author of Life on a Young Planet: The First Three Billion Years of Life. In this wide-ranging interview, Knoll explains, among other compelling ideas, why higher organisms like us are icing on the cake of life, how deeply living things and our planet are intertwined, and why it's so devilishly difficult to figure out how life got started.
135 posted on
09/27/2006 12:09:31 PM PDT by
finnman69
(cum puella incedit minore medio corpore sub quo manifestu s globus, inflammare animos)
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