There are 3 billion base pairs in the human genom(a cell) and around 30-40 trillion cells in a human each specialized for a specific function.
There are approximately 86 billions of neurons in the brain.
The eye has a cornea, iris, pupil, lens, retina, optical nerve, macula, fovea, Aqueous...
You have to firstly work out how many integrated and functioning parts any organism is made up of. Then you have the idea that there are many many intermediate stages in the evolution of any new organism and each stage must complement the previous stage so you have a fully functioning new...
So recent human fossil remains should confirm evolution, for example fossils from ancient Egyptians or any fossils found from say a few hundred to a few thousand years ago should have evolved enough from present day humans that the differences can be measured?
Imagine an animated movie called 'Cells'. The cell characters are processing natural selection as their day job, complaining away at all the challenges and dangers in their path.
Well what is the brain in natural selection or life in general, is there any theory in evolution that describes...
Apparently a human and chimps DNA is not a 1% difference but could be up to 30% different. What are the implications of this for evolution?
Illustrating how wrong this is, in 2012 Drs Jeffrey Tomkins and Jerry Bergman reviewed the published studies comparing human and chimp DNA.5 When all the...
Well it depends on how you define evolution. I am taking about transitioning from one class to another, like reptiles to mammals or insects to reptiles.
This is where the real dispute is. If you want to say each animal / human has it's own genetic footprint and that's evolution then ok but the...
A few things regarding evolution.
As far as I can see there's still a lot of dispute as to whether any of these missing links contain any human bones but the fossils are owned privately making it impossible to analyze the originals. I wonder if they had the originals a different conclusion...