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This video summarizes one of the best leading models. Yes there are others. Science may never know exactly how life DID start, but we will know many ways how life COULD start.
okay so there first organissm dont need blood clotting(thats of course a guess from you and scicen i presume)
so...when it evolves a circulatory system, surely it would not have a ready made clotting system in place also, it would be far too coincidental,,
also, surely the first organisms had dna or some sort, and surely that dna was susceptible to mutations, even more so!!
soooo, how did that dna ever survive without a repair mechanism? surely you cant belive it was in place from the beginning!!
you go on to say..."the giraffes heart and neck would have evolved together throughout the centuries as a mean to accomplish its tasks." this sentence is crazy imo, firstly can you prove this?
second, the faith required to assume this co evolution could occur through random mutations etc is just immense
It is perfectly true that the neck of the giraffe would be fatal if the giraffe had a small heart, or that the blood pressure produced by the heart of the giraffe would be fatal if the giraffe had thin arteries. However, evolutionary theory does not say that evolution does its work first on one feature of an animal, and then on another: it says the very opposite. Obviously random mutations do not form an orderly queue, with those extending the length of the neck going first, those increasing the blood pressure going second, and so forth. Instead, a slightly longer neck gives a selective advantage to a slightly stronger heart, which gives a selective advantage to slightly thicker arteries. So long as there is environmental pressure for slightly longer necks, there is also a selective pressure for these coadaptations, and mutations for them will be favored. It is rather depressing to think that nearly 150 years ago, Darwin gave the same answer to the same grotesque misunderstanding of his theory concerning the same animal, and that it is necessary to repeat it:
"With animals such as the giraffe, of which the whole structure is admirably co-ordinated for certain purposes, it has been supposed that all the parts must have been simultaneously modified; and it has been argued that, on the principle of natural selection, this is scarcely possible. But in thus arguing, it has been tacitly assumed that the variations must have been abrupt and great.[2]"
With this theoretical error, the Creationists compound a crass factual error: supposing that the particular features named are unique to the giraffe. Not one of them is.
* The giraffe has elasticated arteries? So do you, I trust. Hardening of the arteries is an undesirable medical condition: all arteries are by nature elastic.
* The giraffe’s cerebrospinal fluid produces a counter-pressure to prevent rupture or capillary leakage? This again is true of all mammals, and is a matter not of design nor of evolution, but basic physics.
* The giraffe has valves in the veins of its neck? So do all mammals. You too have a jugular valve.
* Giraffes have pressure sensors in their neck arteries? Again, so do all mammals.
* The giraffe has a rete mirable? So do most of its relatives: The function of the rete mirabile is to regulate the flow of arterial blood towards the cerebrum as well as the thermal regulation of the brain preventing it from overheating; the arterial system of the cerebrum in ruminants […] is equipped with a safety system. [3]
* The giraffe has a shunt between the carotid and vertebral arteries? So do many of its relatives, including its closest relative, the okapi, which has a short neck.
In summary, the mechanisms which the giraffe uses to control its blood pressure are all either common to mammals in general, or common to the species most closely related to the giraffe.
Originally posted by RuneSpider
reply to post by KilgoreTrout
I know, I never saw it mentioned in a biology textbook in school, just recently came across it listening to Richard Dawkin's An Ancestor's Tale.
I don't know how recent the discovery is, though, he mentioned it but the problem with audio books is you can't underline key points.
We, as a species, are entirely dependent on a very, very, very small cache of plant based food sources, all of them domesticated and bred for very specific conditions.
Originally posted by rnaa
reply to post by Zenithar
You seem to be making the mistake of assuming that the first organisms were very similar to 'modern' cells. This is extremely unlikely to the point of absurdity. The video below describes the work of Dr. Jack W. Szostak in relation to abiogenesis (first life). The first 2:40 or so is an answer to Creationists that confuse abiogenesis with evolution and think that the first cell had to 'pop' into existence fully formed in all its exquisite complicated wonderfulness. After 2:40 it gets really interesting. Abiogenesis is just physics and chemistry and inevitable in the environment as it existed at the time the first life 'started'.
I assure you I am not making the mistake, if you had read through my previous answers and thread you would no that i am neither a creationist nor do i confuse evolution with abiogenisis, I am talking about the first oganissm THAT HAD these systems, not where or when they originated, we know that at some point, single celeld organisms would replicate many millinos of time, im simply saying that if dna repair was not there, there dead, and if it is there, and the enzyme topoisimerase is not at the same time, its dead,.. so surely its a belif system to think these components were present at this right time!
now i think its you making assumptions " inevitable in the environment as it existed at the time the first life 'started'. " now this is a crazy statement, firstly that whol enviroment is hypothetical, and second, it is not inevitable at all, that is nonsense, what can i say, if you want to belive that its inevitable then thats your way.
To quote the comments from the poster of the video:
This video summarizes one of the best leading models. Yes there are others. Science may never know exactly how life DID start, but we will know many ways how life COULD start.
Dr. Szostak's ideas are still 'just' hypotheses so far. His work, and that of many others, is, of course, being run through the meat grinder of biochemical debate, experiment, peer review, argument, and synthesis as science works towards a theory. Never-the-less it is a very convincing demonstration of how abiogenesis could have proceeded, and indeed would have been inevitable given the conditions existing at the time.
Now to address some of your specific questions:
okay so there first organissm dont need blood clotting(thats of course a guess from you and scicen i presume)
so...when it evolves a circulatory system, surely it would not have a ready made clotting system in place also, it would be far too coincidental,,
Remember that a blood cell is just a cell, even if a highly specialized cell. Blood wasn't required for many many many many many many, etc... generations after the first multicellular organisms. The first organism with 'blood' very likely did not have a clotting mechanism, why would it? But the first organism with both blood and clotting would have had an advantage over their cousins that had only blood without clotting. That little advantage, to be able to survive damage with out leaking to death, would have ensured that those individuals who had the ability would have multiplied and spread that benefit to their more abundantly offspring. That is natural selection - evolution at work.
how would those without clotting survive so many generations of "waitign for blood clotting to arive"
and what about when they multiplied, without topoisimerase present, supercoiing prevents the informatino bieng
read,,,
also, surely the first organisms had dna or some sort, and surely that dna was susceptible to mutations, even more so!!
Not DNA, no, but nucleotides of some sort. A high mutation rate would be critical for throwing up lots and lots and lots of trials, the ones that worked would multiply and keep mutating and evolving, the ones that didn't work would not multiply (at least not as well). The simpler the organism, the greater the effect of mutations. The extreme variety of one celled organisms today is testament to this. That is natural selection - evolution at work. .You are right, like blood clotting, it wouldn't have been in place from the beginning. Organisms without a DNA repair system would be subject to high mutation rates, and high replication error ('birth' defect) rates. At some point down the track a random mutation threw up the DNA repair mechanism and possessors of that mutation would have a decided advantage over their cousins with out it. Organisms that carried the repair mechanism would be automatically more stable as a species and would out survive organisms without it. That is natural selection - evolution at work. Interestingly, speaking of the need to repair and protect chromosomes, Dr. Szostak (of the video above) and his team earned the 2009 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for his work on telomeres and the discovery of how they serve to protect chromosomes. 'In the beginning' the lack of an error replication mechanism is an advantage for building up a large gene pool, that is, for producing a large variety of different organisms that can find their 'niche' in a variety of habitats. Each time something comes along that gives an advantage to one organism over another in any particular niche, the newcomer will come to dominate the population. The first organisms didn't have DNA, but something much simpler (remember the video above). Topoisomerase allows an organism to have longer more complicated DNA strands. Organisms don't require topoisomerase necessarily, but without it they are restricted to being quite simple organisms. Blood clotting allows an individual organism to survive minor damage without leaking to death. Protection from damage, and the ability to repair damage when it does occur, are extremely advantageous to organisms that have that ability. Lack of these features do not automatically make an organism unviable, just more fragile, less stable.
soooo, how did that dna ever survive without a repair mechanism? surely you cant belive it was in place from the beginning!!edit on 26/10/2010 by rnaa because: I like correcting myself. Its therapeutic.
you say... At some point down the track a random mutation threw up the DNA repair mechanism
this is wherer the faith comes in for me, i mean, most of what you described above is obvious, its simply what would happen IF those proposed circumstances actually happend, we cannot simply accept it did. i am a searcher of knowledge and never take this kind of thing on authority but dig in and form my own opinion,
you say "Lack of these features do not automatically make an organism unviable"
can you demonstrate this to me? i mean , it dosent matter that much in terms of my argument but id be very interested to see a currently living organism of this type.
those cells that did not have blood clotting in the early earth, how would they survive all those replications without dna repair? wouldnt it be a lot more likey that they would all die, infact the supposed atmosphere of that tiem would ravage anything not adapted, dna repair was surely teh least of a small cells worries!
anyway
you say "Not DNA, no, but nucleotides of some sort"
one of the many assumptions above, nothign wrong with an inference but evolution goes too far in trying to explain certain "designed" featurse in the natural world
as it stands for me, from my reseach, the mechanisms proposed to produce the astonishing adaptions around us just does not add up al all imo
I assure you I am not making the mistake, if you had read through my previous answers and thread you would no that i am neither a creationist nor do i confuse evolution with abiogenisis,
I am talking about the first oganissm THAT HAD these systems, not where or when they originated, we know that at some point, single celeld organisms would replicate many millinos of time, im simply saying that if dna repair was not there, there dead,
and if it is there, and the enzyme topoisimerase is not at the same time, its dead,.. so surely its a belif system to think these components were present at this right time!
now i think its you making assumptions " inevitable in the environment as it existed at the time the first life 'started'. now this is a crazy statement, firstly that whol enviroment is hypothetical,
and second, it is not inevitable at all,
how would those without clotting survive so many generations of "waitign for blood clotting to arive"
and what about when they multiplied, without topoisimerase present, supercoiing prevents the informatino bieng
read,
you say... At some point down the track a random mutation threw up the DNA repair mechanism
this is wherer the faith comes in for me, i mean, most of what you described above is obvious, its simply what would happen IF those proposed circumstances actually happend, we cannot simply accept it did.
i am a searcher of knowledge and never take this kind of thing on authority but dig in and form my own opinion,
you say "Lack of these features do not automatically make an organism unviable"
can you demonstrate this to me? i mean , it dosent matter that much in terms of my argument but id be very interested to see a currently living organism of this type.
those cells that did not have blood clotting in the early earth, how would they survive all those replications without dna repair?
wouldnt it be a lot more likey that they would all die,
infact the supposed atmosphere of that tiem would ravage anything not adapted,
dna repair was surely teh least of a small cells worries!
DNA and RNA would have to be working together from the beginning.
Originally posted by KilgoreTrout
The neck is not a big deal, it is proven. Brachiasaurus, Diplodocus, has incredibly long, flexible necks. But they were cold blooded and very small brained (proportionately), so the heart may not have needed to have been as big, and therefore, they would not have needed the value system in the neck to control the pressure of the blood flow. But either way, without those adaptations, the long neck, combined with a mammalian brain, wouldn’t be feasible without the huge heart and ‘neck’ valves.
Therefore, long necks, large hearts, and valves are all regularly occurring mutations. For those mutations to then succeed and become a ‘feature’ of success, they have to both occur with enough frequency to allow the pairing of the necessary genes, but infrequently enough for it to be given a preference in sexual selection. There must also, most importantly be a ‘drive’, either sexual or dietary, that leads to that trait being passed onto successive generations. That is, it is no accident, it is driven by a desire, in this case, to reach higher, the Giraffe forces it’s own evolution.
The tongue is specially adapted to wrap around a stem, and strip the leaves and young shoots, off the stem. It primarily favours the Acacia erioloba and I wonder if there is a symbiotic relationship, evolutionary wise in that. The roots and bark of the tree were used by humans to treat headaches, it may have blood thinning properties.
Giraffes have very good eyesight, the leaves are probably rich in betacarotenes, which the Giraffe then converts into Retinal.
Given the markings of the Giraffe, it is likely that they have a surplus of betacarotenes in their diet that allow for the markings.
It also allows them to see the markings, they most likely have three colour vision.
The tree, has very yellow flowers, which have a sweet scent, the Giraffes have good sense of small. Because of the thorns, which are impressive, the tongue has to reach where the eyes can’t see. Hence the co-evolution. The plant produces betacarotenes that help the animal to see Yellow (and orange), I’d bet my bottom dollar, that the Giraffes are the main pollenators too. And it has yellow, scented flowers, that tell the Giraffe where the young leaves it likes so much are, and the Giraffe is ‘tricked’ into rubbing it’s snout in the pollen.