articulett
Banned
- Joined
- Jan 18, 2005
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I'm just curious: when people say the fossil record is incomplete, what exactly do they mean? That we haven't yet dug up all the fossils that are in the ground available to us? That the fossil record doesn't show every species (or a sample of every population, or every individual) that ever lived?
In other words, what would it mean for the fossil record to be "complete"?
Yes...what would "complete" look like? And how are we supposed to get it when death degrades life forms over time? I liked Delphi's number analogy. And I think there were a lot of great answers that were hardly pat. I think I gave good links and answers.
Before DNA, we had to guess where animals fit based entirely on the phenotype of fossils we could find. With DNA we can see the actual changes and relatedness of individuals. It confirms evolution beautifully and opens the door to knew knowledge.
But phenotype does not directly correlate with how closely two animals are related; it's helpful...but if someone were to dig up dog skeletons, they might conclude they had a whole bunch of different species--whereas, many rodent species look similar, but are not the same species at all.
Here's another quirk about fossils and the like. Sometimes a single point mutation can cause a very noticeable skeletal change--achondroplasia (the most common form of dwarfism) is a good example. If achondroplasia helped a species that had it survive because, say, tall organisms were killed by tree snakes or something, then the fossil record would show a dramatic change with no inbetween forms--because achondroplasia is autosomal dominant. There wouldn't be skeletal examples of organisms inbetween achondroplastics and normal.
Albinism is similar, although it's recessive. An albino doesn't pass on (light colored genes)--only the normal pigment genes they carry and a recessive copy of a gene that can't translate the genes to produce pigment. An albino that carrys "dark" genes who mates with a non-albino that has "light' genes is likely to produce an animal darker than both parents.
So intermediary forms and fossils are helpful clues from a "macroevolution persepective, but visual clues and guesses leave out some of the finer details of the story. Especially since we've learned that a lot of genes are more like "basic floorplans" that can be modified via the environment the organism finds itself in. Just as blind people recruit the vision portions of the brain to enhance other senses--so, too, do emerging organisms utilize their genomes via adaptation.
By the way, I'm not insulted, Dr. A. There are many dishonest creationists who start threads with very similar hokey analogies and the "gaps in the fossil record" is a common part of the wedge strategy in regards to getting people to doubt evolution. Moreover, the OP admitted that he wasn't sure what he was asking. Also, people gave beautiful well written answers, and I thought it was insulting to dismiss them as pat. If they sounded simplistic it was because his candle analogy sounded so simplistic and wrong-headed that it left one with the impression that he didn't have much of a clue about evolution and might need some of the basics.
Moreover, if his question wasn't about explaining fossil gaps to creationists-- what do you think it was about? If I over-reacted it's only because I, like many here have been lead along this path before, and we all know it's a maddening experience to have someone carefully consider your question, give a detailed scientific explanation, and then have it dismissed as "pat" while repeating their favorite "flaw in evolution" theory again and again (shan't mention the ear worm).