| THE DINO-BIRD FANTASY
ON THE DISCOVERY CHANNEL
A documentary
about dinosaurs was broadcast on The Discovery Channel in January
2003. Most of the film was devoted to the way dinosaurs lived. Various
dinosaur fossils were presented, and speculations advanced regarding
their feeding habits and whether they were carnivorous. In the light
of major fossil discoveries, particularly on the continents of Asia
and America, the program tried to establish the migratory routes
that these giant creatures might have followed.
The last 10 minutes of the film consisted
of an introduction to the matter of "feathered dinosaurs," so frequently
alluded to in evolutionist propaganda. It was maintained that feathers
had been found on one fossil, called Caudipteryx, and that
this fossil represented an intermediate form in the so-called evolution
of birds.
The claims made on The Discovery Channel
about the fossils are unfounded. The dino-bird theory, based on
two fossils, flies in the face of the scientific facts. A wider
consideration of the scientific findings that totally undermine
the dino-bird theory can be found at our website www.darwinismrefuted.com.
The first of the two fossils given
in the film is Sinosauropteryx. When this fossil was first
found, in 1996, it was claimed that it had structures similar to
feathers. However, later detailed analysis in 1997 revealed that
these structures had nothing at all to do with feathers. The evolutionists
therefore abandoned their claims that the creature had been feathered.
The second species alleged in the documentary
to have been feathered is Caudipteryx. Evolutionists are
unanimous that Caudipteryx lacked the power of flight.
The creature had short arms and long legs, and possessed an anatomy
far better suited to running. The main feature to invalidate the
thesis that Caudipteryx might have been the ancestor to
the birds is its age. Caudipteryx, which Phil Currie attempts
to portray as a transitional species, is some 120 million years
old. Archaeopteryx, the oldest known bird, is 30 million
years older than that. The 150-million-year old bird Archaeopteryx
is solid evidence that Caudipteryx was not an intermediate species.
Archaeopteryx lived long before Caudipteryx and
was able to fly perfectly, just like modern birds.
The dino-bird theory actually constitutes
a rather superficial propaganda tool, which is why even some evolutionist
scientists reject it. In an article in New Scientist, the
famous ornithologist Alan Feduccia sets out the anatomical differences
between birds and dinosaurs and states that from the paleontological
point of view the theory is a disgrace:
Well, I've studied
bird skulls for 25 years and I don't see any similarities whatsoever.
I just don't see it... The theropod [a bipedal, meat-eating dinosaur]
origins of birds, in my opinion, will be the greatest embarrassment
of paleontology of the 20th century.1
Another ornithologist, Larry Martin,
makes this comment in the same article:
To tell you the truth,
if I had to support the dinosaur origin of birds with those characters,
I'd be embarrassed every time I had to get up and talk about it.2
Birds are the origin of birds. It is
out of the question for dinosaurs or any other land animal to have
come by the power of flight as a result of gradual mutations. That
is because birds' bodies are specially designed to fly. When one
examines the bird wing, feather, lung, and other structures, one
encounters particular features peculiar to flight that are not found
on any land creatures. The most important feature of this design
is its irreducible nature. The wing, lung, and feather need to be
present in perfect form in order for flight to be possible. One
Turkish evolutionist, Engin Konur, says:
The common trait
of the eyes and the wings is that they can only function if they
are fully developed. In other words, a halfway-developed eye cannot
see; a bird with half-formed wings cannot fly. How these organs
came into being has remained one of the mysteries of nature that
needs to be elucidated.3
Conclusion
In the light of scientific findings,
the theory that birds evolved from dinosaurs, as broadcast by The
Discovery Channel, is invalid. Evolutionist sources such as The
Discovery Channel shut their ears to the scientific facts and continue
to portray this piece of fantastic fiction as if it were a scientific
theory. We call on The Discovery Channel to abandon this deception,
described by the famous ornithologist Larry Martin as "embarrassing,"
and to look upon birds and dinosaurs as separate species.
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