To: Just mythoughts
How many fossilized bones have you found in your own backyard?
Animals have been living and dying in your yard for millions of years. However, most of them rot and disintegrate instead of becoming a fossil.
Using your backyard, and it's total lack of fossils, would you conclude that there was no life in your region until you arrived?
Would you be correct in your conclusion?
7 posted on
12/03/2003 5:07:24 PM PST by
Hunble
To: Hunble
I have on my monitor a rock about 6 inches X 4 inches and about 2 inches thick. It is filled with fossils. I found it along a river bank about 3 hours from my home.
I have been to Glen Rose, Texas, and put my feet into the HUGE footprints made "ages" ago when the dinosaurs age ended.
I believe the evidence when I see it, and there are no "skeletal remains" of transitioning "apes" to "humans", no matter who claims it is what happened.
To: Hunble
You should know better than to try to talk logic to a creationist...
40 posted on
12/03/2003 6:48:47 PM PST by
Central Scrutiniser
(Which is the most universal human characteristic? Fear or Laziness?)
To: Hunble
But wouldn't you agree that out of the uncountable number of transitional forms that must have lived for one species to evolve into another, there being thousands of species with bodies gross enough to have good sized bones, virtually every fossil we find should be that of a transitional form?
No, of course you won't, because you want to believe in evolution just like some Christians want to believe in creationism.
140 posted on
12/04/2003 6:45:31 AM PST by
William Terrell
(Individuals can exist without government but government can't exist without individuals.)
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