Here's your chance...
Barbarian offers to demonstrate transitional fossils:
Please show me in any order you please. Also please note that I don't consider e.g. fossils for 20 different types of creatures a large number.
I can show you more than that for humans alone. Let's do them first. What would you consider to be the defining characteristics of a transitional fossil, particularly a human one? What do you think defines an ape fossil, and what defines a human fossil? Do that, and we will begin.
A large number of fossils would be fossils for hundreds (of different types of creatures). (I would however settle for about one hundred.) I don't think this is unreasonable given the fact that there are millions of forms of life around us.
There are many more than a hundred. There are certainly over a hundred specimens of hominine fossils.
Then there is the fact that hundreds of millions of years old fossils of creatures such as the honeybee, dragon fly, and ant, show these creatures to be virtually the same as their contemporaries.
Barbarian observes:
You've been misled about that, too. For example, the earliest ant known shows exactly the transitional characteristics that show it's hymenopteran ancestry.
Please look here, which is the source of my information.
I looked. At first I thought he was joking, but he seems to be serious. The modern ant is quite antlike. But the fossil in amber is more wasplike than antlike, haveing antennae of a wasp, and a thickened petiole. It does have two nodes on the petiole, which only ants have, and I happen to know this specimen has metaplural glands, although you wouldn't know by looking. In short, it's intermediate between a genuine ant and more primitive hymentopterans.
The modern honeybee is clearly Apis, but the fossil "bee" looks like a hornet.
The dragonfly fossil is too poorly reproduced to say what it is. However, the first known odonota were considerably different than modern ones. There are also transitionals between the dragonflies and other insects:
"The Protodonata were a group of large to gigantic predatory flying insects, with wingspans of 12 to 75 cm. Like dragonflies, to which they were related, they had long narrow bodies, huge eyes, and strong jaws and spiny legs for grasping prey. The wing veination is extremely primitive, with all the main veins except one (the Rs vein) having separate origins at the base of the wing, and the cubito-anal area represented by a single vein. The characteristic structure of the true Odonata (dragonfly) wing are not developed. There was also a dense reticulation of cross-veins.
The Protodonata were transitional between the Palaeodictyoptera and the Odontata. Almost certainly the larvae were aquatic and carnivorous (like modern dragonfly larvae), and fed on small aquatic vertebrates (fish, and amphibia) or larger invertebrates. It is likely that the adults frequented open spaces where they had room to maneuver, and may well have spread to upland environments. Only a few families and genera are known; this appears to have been a small group, or alternatively to have frequented areas where they would not have easily fossilized."
http://www.palaeos.com/Invertebrates/Ar ... onata.html
Contrary to your muslim website's assertion, dragonflies and damselflies continued to evolve significantly through the Permian.
Add to this: the oldest stratum of earth having fossils, show a sudden appearance of diverse forms of life. According to this link, 'The fossils found in Cambrian rocks belonged to snails, trilobites, sponges, earthworms, jellyfish, sea hedgehogs, and other complex invertebrates. This wide mosaic of living organisms made up of such a great number of complex creatures emerged so suddenly that this miraculous event is referred to as the "Cambrian Explosion" in geological literature. '
Barbarian observes:
You've been misled about that, too. Complex multicellular life is much older than the Cambrian.
(spriggina, a wormlike organism from the Ediacaran)
This one is from the Ediacaran, millions of years before the Cambrian. We also have tracks made by multi-legged creatures, burrows, and remains of organisms with partial exoskeletons, all before the Cambrian. The Cambrian explosion coincides with the evolution of fully-armored organisms.
Actually this article refutes your information and supports mine.
Nope. It gives lie to the assertion that complex forms appeared suddenly in the Cambrian. That's a complete falsehood. The assertion that the organisms were plants being protected by chitin was rather odd, since plants don't have chitin. Chitin is a molecule found in animals like insects and other arthropods and in fungi, which are genetically closer to animals than plants.
http://www.psrc.usm.edu/macrog/sea/chitin.htm
Besides, it's wrong anyway. Soft-bodied organisms fossilize well where the sediment is silty and slow.
http://www.fossilmall.com/Fossil_Archiv ... darian.htm
Not much there is, softer than a jellyfish.
Therefore contrary to what you assert, fossils do not support evolution, instead, they support creation.
You've got a lot of homework to do. Suffice to say the people who told you this stuff were not being honest with you. Where would you like to start?
I doubt it. But please show me the information you were volunteering to show me.
Here's your first challenge:
http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/homs/compare.html
After you answer the above questions on what a transistional is, (in terms of human evolution), take a look at some hominine skulls and tell us which ones you think are human, and which are not. Notice that even "creation experts" can't agree, because the transition from one to another is so slight.
Then, after you decide where you stand on this, we'll go on and look at some more evidence.