reply to post by AliceBleachWhite
Didnt you know? This whale of chained events was broken right in half. Ive been meaning to come back and reply to this.
The key to this story is a fossil of a creature called Rodhocetus, which is portrayed as the first creature with legs changing into flippers and with
the tail developing into a whale’s tail. Without it there is really no story, but recent disclosures undo the tale.
Dr Philip Gingerich, who found the fossil, and promoted the idea that Rodhocetus had a whale’s tail. The fossil is on display at the University of
Michigan, but Dr Carl Werner noted that the part that would show the presence of the flukes (the rear wings) is missing. He asked about the missing
tail bones and how they knew it had tail flukes.
Dr Gingerich replied,
“I speculated that it might have had a fluke … I now doubt that Rodhocetus would have had a fluked tail.”
And the legs becoming flippers?
Dr. Werner noted on inspecting the fossil of Rodhocetus the absence of any foot/flipper bones. When he asked Dr Gingerich how he knew that the animal
had flippers, Dr Gingerich said,
“Since then we have found the forelimbs, the hands, and the front arms of Rodhocetus, and we understand that it doesn’t have the kind of arms that
can spread out like flippers on a whale.”
Dr.Werner "It appears to me that there is no end to new conjectures of how whale evolution might have occurred. I say this because each museum that I
visit has a different idea since the Rodhocetus story came out in 2007."
This is a single case of speculation being used to advance what we are supposed to believe as fact. This is institutional intentional misdirection.
WHY?
There are many other problems with whale evolution. Museums and textbooks portray the fossil story as being clear-cut, yet evolutionists cannot even
agree on which land animal gave rise to the whales. Based on fossil similarities of teeth, some paleontologists favoured hyena-like animals
(Pachyaena), while others preferred a cat-like animal (Sinonyx). But after recent comparisons of DNA, molecular biologists decided hippos were the
closest to a whale ancestor!
There are, of course, huge problems in converting a hippo-like creature into a whale. Not even the teeth are similar: hippos’ teeth are flat and
rasp-like, good for grinding up vegetation, whereas the toothed whales have pointed, sharp teeth, used now for catching fish and other swimming
animals.
adding source, im sure people will bitch about it being "creationist", sorry the'res no Discovery article revealing all this, it'd only embarass alot
of big headed people.
creation.mobi...
edit on 25-1-2014 by Climax because: (no reason given)
edit on 25-1-2014 by Climax because: (no reason given)