Posted on 03/13/2002 4:47:26 AM PST by JediGirl
Basic bottom line, the Grand Canyon was blasted straight out of the rock by a fantastic electrical discharge between this planet and some other cosmic body, a comet, asteroid, or another planet, and most of the material from the canyon was either vaporized or blasted straight out into space. Real interesting spectacle, but you'd have wanted to watch from a considerable distance...
Please explain
Selection creates dependencies.
Sir, with all due respect, I believe your argument to be dependencies create selection.
Seems to you based on what? Where are the chimeras?
so if both man and chimp have it, then the other apes should have it too
Please explain, I don't see this at all.
Although there doesn't exist any fossil evidence for variation by small mutation, proponents of evolution can usually come up with a story to explain the developmental stages of any particular creature. In the case of the woodpecker's tongue, they can't even come up with a remotely plausible story.
The historical evidence for evolution also shows a remarkable sequence of misrepresentations or outright frauds, which I've highlighted. (All of these "scientific facts" were taught ot me in 10th grade biology in the late '70s, and I'm not very happy about being lied to)
* The Miller-Urey Experiment: evolutionists claim that it demonstrated the emergence of primitive life from Earths early atmosphere. Wells shows why, for at least a decade, most geochemists have been convinced it did nothing of the sort.Then there are the other fraudulent "fossils" like Nebraska Man and Piltdown Man.* Darwins "Tree of Life," showing the branching of species from a common ancestor: supposedly reconstructed from a large and growing body of fossil and molecular evidence, it has actually been "uprooted and turned upside down" by the evidence
* Similiar bone structures in vertebrate limbs (e.g., a bat's wing, a porpoise's flipper, a horse's leg, a human hand): Darwinists claim they indicate origin in a common ancestor -- but Wells points out the faulty logic underlying this claim, and the gaping hole in the theory built around it
* "Haeckel's embryos": evolutionists use these famous drawings of similarities in early embryos to argue that amphibians, reptiles, birds and humans are all descended from a fish-like animal, and that embryonic development "recapitulates" the stages of evolution. Trouble is, Wells easily proves, the drawings are fakes, misrepresenting the embryos the purport to show! (And they're deceptive in another crucial sense, too)
* Archaeopteryx, a fossil bird with teeth in its jaws and claws on its wings: for over a century, Darwinists have called this the "missing link" between ancient reptiles and modern birds, and "unimpeachable" evidence for evolution. But Wells demonstrates that "paleontologists now agree that Archaeopteryx is not the ancestor of modern birds, and its own ancestors are the subject of one of the most heated controversies in science. The missing link, it seems, is still missing."
* Peppered moths on tree trunks: most textbooks illustrate natural selection with photographs of the two varieties of peppered moths resting on light- and dark-colored tree trunks. But Wells explains why "biologists have known since the 1980s that the classical story has some serious flaws" -- beginning with the fact that peppered moths in the wild don't even rest on tree trunks, and that the textbook photos have been staged!
* "Darwin's finches" on the Galapagos Islands: legend has it that they were instrumental in helping Darwin to formulate his theory of evolution, and that field observations in the 1970s provided evidence for the theory by showing how natural selection affects the birds' beaks. Both claims are patently false, Wells demonstrates
* Four-winged fruit flies: Wells explains why they're "no better than a two-headed calf in a circus sideshow" for proving that genetic mutations supply the raw materials for evolution. Why, then, has it become popular to feature them in textbooks and public presentations defending Darwin's theory? Because they help conceal a deeper problem with the evidence
* A "branching tree" pattern of horse fossils: since the '50s, Darwinists have campaigned to replace the old "linear" icon of horse evolution -- which suggested that evolution may have been "directed" by some supernatural or internal agency -- with this one. But, as Wells shows, the new icon isn't an inference from the evidence, but an imposition of materialist philosophy on it
* From Ape to Human: a series of drawings showing a knuckle-walking ape evolving through a series of intermediate forms into an upright human being. Wells calls this "the ultimate icon" of evolution, and shows why the pitifully meager "evidence" for it lends itself to interpretations that are "heavily influenced by personal beliefs and prejudices"
1. ORIGIN OF LIFE. Why do textbooks claim that the 1953 Miller-Urey experiment shows how life's building blocks may have formed on the early Earth -- when conditions on the early Earth were probably nothing like those used in the experiment, and the origin of life remains a mystery?
2. DARWIN'S TREE OF LIFE. Why don't textbooks discuss the "Cambrian explosion," in which all major animal groups appear together in the fossil record fully formed instead of branching from a common ancestor -- thus contradicting the evolutionary tree of life?
3. HOMOLOGY. Why do textbooks define homology as similarity due to common ancestry, then claim that it is evidence for common ancestry -- a circular argument masquerading as scientific evidence?
4. VERTEBRATE EMBRYOS. Why do textbooks use drawings of similarities in vertebrate embryos as evidence for their common ancestry -- even though biologists have known for over a century that vertebrate embryos are not most similar in their early stages, and the drawings are faked?
5. ARCHAEOPTERYX. Why do textbooks portray this fossil as the missing link between dinosaurs and modern birds -- even though modern birds are probably not descended from it, and its supposed ancestors do not appear until millions of years after it?
6. PEPPERED MOTHS. Why do textbooks use pictures of peppered moths camouflaged on tree trunks as evidence for natural selection -- when biologists have known since the 1980s that the moths don't normally rest on tree trunks, and all the pictures have been staged?
7. DARWIN'S FINCHES. Why do textbooks claim that beak changes in Galapagos finches during a severe drought can explain the origin of species by natural selection -- even though the changes were reversed after the drought ended, and no net evolution occurred?
8. MUTANT FRUIT FLIES. Why do textbooks use fruit flies with an extra pair of wings as evidence that DNA mutations can supply raw materials for evolution -- even though the extra wings have no muscles and these disabled mutants cannot survive outside the laboratory?
9. HUMAN ORIGINS. Why are artists' drawings of ape-like humans used to justify materialistic claims that we are just animals and our existence is a mere accident -- when fossil experts cannot even agree on who our supposed ancestors were or what they looked like?
10. EVOLUTION A FACT? Why are we told that Darwin's theory of evolution is a scientific fact -- even though many of its claims are based on misrepresentations of the facts?
A magazine cover article a few years back was titled something like "The Big-Bang of Evolution (the Cambrian Explosion)" as if that somehow or other wasn't an oxymoron. Kind of like "the big sex orgy of chastity" or some such.
Please explain...
What are the chances that a randomly chosen voter voted for Bush? About 1/2. What are the chances a voter is fiscally conservative? About 1/2. What are the chances a voter voted for Bush AND is fiscally conservative? The answer is not 1/4.
1. chances of something happening: the likelihood or probability that something will occur, sometimes expressed as a ratio such as 10 to 1 The odds are that you'll never make it.
Note: the statement 'the odds are that you'll never make it' was an actual part of the definition. What are the odds?!
You never saw--heard of a drying--shrinking crack? Ever see one in mud??
One need not postulate any other mechanism than water erosion and time---
...you believe that?
Is that how you learn--think--teach..."one need not"?
No wonder you believe this evolution infantile nonsense---garbage!
Short explanation: odds for are the ratio of "favorable" cases to "unfavorable" caes (odds against is the reciprocal). Probability is the ration of "favorable" cases to total cases. For example in flipping a fair coin, the probability of getting heads is 1/2 but the odds of getting heads is 1/1. On an ordinary die, the probability of throwing an ace is 1/6 but the odds against are 5/1.
From Grand Canyon Explorer:
Prior to about 35 million years ago the ancestral Colorado River flowed across a vast plain, along a course very similar to that of today.
When the Kaibab Plateau began to uplift approximately 35 million years ago the river was diverted to the southeast because it could not cross newly created barrier. The new course for the river now flowed out to the Gulf of Mexico instead of to the Pacific Ocean. The old course on west side of the Kaibab Plateau, the Hualapai Drainage System, continued to be a major drainage for the plateau itself and the regions west of it.
At some point around 12 million years ago, the river's course to the Gulf of Mexico became blocked and an enormous lake, know referred to as Lake Bidahochi, was formed as a result.
Meanwhile, on the western side of the Kaibab Plateau, a process known as "headwater erosion" began eating its way through the southern portion of the plateau. After millions of years this erosional process allowed the Hualapai system to break through the barrier created by the uplifted plateau and rejoin the ancestral Colorado.
Once the break-through was complete the ancestral Colorado River began to follow the new course becuase of its steeper and more desirable descent. The waters of Lake Bidahochi began to drain through the new course as well and the result is the gorge through which the Little Colorado River now flows. The combined flow of the Colorado River and the Little Colorado River west of their confluence continued to widen and deepen the course and created the Grand Canyon.
After Lake Bidahochi was drained the space that it once occupied was replaced by the Little Colorado River drainage system. |
This seems to imply that water erosion and 35 million years is more than sufficient to work the magic we call the Grand Canyon.
What's faster, water erosion or the tectonic raising of the landscape? Answer: water erosion, always.
Say a pre-existing river cuts right across where a tectonic compression is raising a mountain ridge. The rising of the land dams the water a bit. You get a bit of a lake, with a natural spillway in the old riverbed where the water flows over the rising hump.
The downstream side of the hump wears away faster than the river bottom upstream or downstream. What happens? The "spillway" erodes back to the "lake" and it all gives out with a big rush.
You can see this sort of thing everywhere. In the Sweetwater Valley, which I visited to reseach a book, there's a spectacular cut through a ridge of bare rock.
Note that, if the ridge is there before the river forms, the river channel simply forms in such a way to go around the ridge and that's that.
The Grand Canyon is not a problem for mainstream science. It's a problem for all the psychoceramics who would like to explain it any other way.
Empirical data is used in genetics to compute probabilities all the time. It is interesting that you sight gambling to dispute the probabilities posed above. Evolution is just a big gamble after all and it continues to try its luck on different machines all the time but the house wins.
The article that these posts are supposed to be based upon even site a probabilities link. It doesnt work though what are the chances?
Live and learn. I didn't think tectonic forces ever won the race against water erosion.
But, as someone will no doubt quickly point out, I'm just a dilettante here.
(But that someone has a question or two of his own to answer.)
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