| NEW FOSSIL FISH
DISCOVERIES POSE A NEW DILEMMA FOR THE THEORY OF EVOLUTION
The February
21, 2003, edition of the journal Science carried an article called
"Separate evolutionary origins of teeth from evidence in fossil
jawed vertebrates." Based on studies of a number of fish fossils
from the Devonian Period, it was suggested in the article that teeth
may have evolved at least twice. The aim of this paper is to set
out the inconsistent aspects of this claim.
Written by craniofacial development
researcher Moya Meredith Smith and paleontologist Zerina Johanson,
the article begins by considering the origin of the fish known as
placoderms according to the theory of evolution. Placodermi
is the name of a class of jawed fish that disappeared during the
Devonian Period (between 408 and 360 million years ago). This class
is regarded in the imaginary evolutionary family tree as the ancestor
of all jawed vertebrates. In the current evolutionist literature,
it is considered that these fish had no teeth, and that teeth only
evolved after the jaw, and thus in the vertebrates which came after
the placoderms. However, in the Science article Smith and
Johanson state that they have encountered a situation, which changes
this. The researchers go on to say that they have encountered real
teeth containing dentine in certain fossils belonging to some groups
of the arthrodira family of the order placodermi (Eastmanosteus,
Gogopiscis gracilis, Compagopiscis croucheri). This represents
a new dilemma for the theory of evolution, because it appears that
an organ as complex as the tooth emerged in a period far older than
evolutionists had hitherto believed. This, in turn, leaves evolutionists
a far narrower period of time in which to engage in speculation
regarding the so-called evolution of teeth, and thus represents
an enormous quandary for the theory itself.
Another problem this new finding represents
for the theory of evolution is that evolutionists are now obliged
to maintain that teeth evolved not once, but two separate times.
In their Science article, Smith and Johanson claim that
teeth might have originated three or more times among jawed vertebrates.
This reveals that evolutionists, who in any case support a totally
indefensible scenario (namely,the illogical claim that a complex
design such as that in teeth could be the work of chance mutations),
are now obliged to propose that this scenario actually took place
many times.
Let us also recall here that evolutionists
already face an insuperable dilemma when it comes to the origin
of fish: It has been calculated that the fossil fish Haikouichthys
ercaicunensis and Myllokunmingia fengjiaoa found in
China in 1999 are some 530 million years old. That figure takes
us back to the exact middle of the Cambrian Period, when just about
all the known animal phyla emerged. The fact that the origins of
fish stretch this far back-this discovery pushes their origins back
by some 50 million years-demonstrates that fish emerged at the same
time as the invertebrate sea creatures that are supposed to have
been their ancestors, which in turn deals a lethal blow to the evolutionary
"family tree."
In short, the fossil research on the
origin of fish represents an insuperable problem for the theory
of evolution. The evidence continues to clearly show that the origin
of fish and all other living things is not evolution, but creation.
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