On 5/29/07 2:12 PM, Anne Lane's electrons arrived as:
>I think that the person who
> spoke of demonstrating the evolution of a current species into a new one meant
> something more on the order of an animal of one species giving birth to
> something of a demonstrably new species.
Here's an interesting observation on fruit fly speciation:
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2003-06/uor-nsf061203.php
Personally, I don't understand the point by Creationists that evolution
science should be able to produce a current new species or transitional
species.
It seems to me that the time-scale required for evolutionary change makes it
impossible that one species could be observed transforming into another in
real-time nature -- particularly when looking through a window only 150
years wide. Maybe someone on the list better informed on speciation could
comment...
Same for so-called transitional species -- which in order to survive as a
species would not appear transitional in the sense of being just a temporary
anomaly. The duck-billed platypus is an example -- but for that matter, so
are bats and sea lions. Seems like all species are transitional.
/s
_____________________________________
S t e p h e n N o w l i n
http://xrl.us/googlewilliamson
Director, Williamson Gallery
Art Center College of Design
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