Posted on 05/04/2005 12:32:23 PM PDT by MeanWestTexan
Caught in the act of evolution, the odd-looking, feathered dinosaur was becoming more vegetarian, moving away from its meat-eating ancestors.
It had the built-for-speed legs of meat-eaters, but was developing the bigger belly of plant-eaters. It had already lost the serrated teeth needed for tearing flesh. Those were replaced with the smaller, duller vegetarian variety.
(Excerpt) Read more at lasvegassun.com ...
Please don't Wikipedia is not a reliable source of information. Anyone can write anything they want at any time. Someone else can correct it with anything else they want at any time, and so forth ad infinitum. The assumption is that eventually accurate information will appear. The problem is, no one knows when "eventually" has happened.
You're better served getting a subscription to the Encyclopedia Britannica online.
Good point...
Darwin was very confused.. as Matchetts quotes from a reader of him supply..
Actually he(Matchett) quoted somebody else that quoted him..
And you are quoting a post by Matchett quoting somebody else that quoted Darwin who didn't quote but actually said something.. Alright everybody clear here..
(removing my glasses) resting my case.. d;-`
That's a bit misleading. We have a huge baseline of humans for comparative analysis. When you start dealing with fossils of extinct animals, you have to start making assumptions. You start saying things like: OK, this tooth is similar to a pig, therefore X. OK, this femur is similar to an ostrich, therefore Y.
It becomes a great deal of educated guesswork and is not as precise as the popular press would have you believe.
Not a problem. Incisors are scissor teeth. Cows pull grass. Humans would clip it, then chew.
Why should I do that.?.. Matchett can defend himself fully..
Can only hope to read the chicken plucking your gonna git..
This is fun...
Oh! I suspect the clucking and plucking and down right ducking from cogent analysis will be classic free republic drama.. Found no where else on the internet I might add.. this good..
I'm a just water boy in Matchetts-PI's corner..
They shouldn't be. They should be the common ancestor of some critter on down the road.
That brings up a question. Are there any common ancestors that aren't extinct? I mean, sharks have been around for something like 200 million years. Certainly they should be the common ancestor to something.
"Humans would clip it, then chew."
LOL. Go look at some Buffalo grass.
But to satisfy you, we'll race. You against any non-nursing calf on the ranch (so there's no too much a size disadvantage).
"Are there any common ancestors that aren't extinct?"
Yeah, there are, for several branches of creatures.
Some goofy-looking proto-horse comes to mind as the common ancestor of donkey, zebras, and horses.
There are also a lot of diverse insects and crabs with living common ancestors.
In the plant family, there's the common ancestor of broccli, asparagus, and caulflower --- but that doesn't really count as those three species are are the result of artifically-induced evolution by man.
Bingo. Just another proevolutionary misinterpretation of "evidence."
Out of context according to who.?.. YOU...
A quote (being a quote) is ALWAYS out of context..
else it would not merely be a quote.. Whats your point.?.
If you mean the "greater" meaning is enclosed in far more verbage.. then you're saying all quoteing is out of context.. Unless the quote supports you're own thesis.. then its accurate..
DuuuH...
Why?
Well, they're pretty common now, and even cows like doing what will eventually make them ancestors.
A domestic cow --- barring continued support by humans --- - probably won't be an ancestor of anything.
They have been so in-bred and selectively bred that they are: (1) unhealthy; (2) subject to disease; and (3) most importantly, require a whole buch o' feed to live.
Wild cattle looked a lot more like those lean, big-horned, creatures one sees in India.
Bit of an evolutionary dead end --- overspecialization of being a food source for man --- who does care for them and breed them --- but no man, no domestic cattle.
Can say the same thing for my stupid sheep.
But if human support continues and enough time passes, even the poor, benighted cow of today has a shot at becoming an ancestor. Not much of a shot, I admit, but tomorrow's cows have to descend from something.
Ah! PROOF.. thats what this is all about.. ain't it..
Proving the unprovable.. If you have an agenda then proof becomes dogma...
I gag down the ceationist side somewhat but thats really unprovable also.. I would gag down a bit of Darminism too but the only problem to me is the Darwinists themselves.. A feather evolved from a scale.. really.. Adam and Eve is at least a good metaphor.. and very good way to answer childrens fears that they are just "MEAT" on the hoof.. for some predator.. Evolution on the other hand is fairy tale for adults, actually a nightmare.. as much as I can determine.. The good guys MUST win else I'm not playin..
And they are winning.. Betcha more Evos abort their children than Creationists do..
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