trilobite Type post Author Jonathan Wells Date May 10, 2023 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionPaleontology Tagged , bedtime story, Cambrian Explosion, Cambrian News, Charles Darwin, DNA, evolution, fossil record, Gareth Nelson, geological time, Henry Gee, Niles Eldredge, On the Origin of Species, paleontology, phyla, punctuated equilibria, skeletons, Stephen Jay Gould, Top Scientific Problems with Evolution (series), transitional links Top Scientific Problems with Evolution: Fossils Jonathan Wells May 10, 2023 Biology, Evolution, Paleontology 6 The abruptness seen in the Cambrian explosion can also be seen on smaller scales throughout the fossil record. Read More ›
trilobite Type post Author Jonathan Wells Date February 12, 2022 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionLife Sciences Tagged , bedtime story, Cambrian Explosion, Cambrian News, Charles Darwin, DNA, evolution, fossil record, Gareth Nelson, geological time, Henry Gee, Niles Eldredge, On the Origin of Species, paleontology, phyla, punctuated equilibria, skeletons, Stephen Jay Gould, Top Scientific Problems with Evolution (series), transitional links Top Scientific Problems with Evolution: Fossils Jonathan Wells February 12, 2022 Biology, Evolution, Life Sciences 5 The abruptness seen in the Cambrian explosion can also be seen on smaller scales throughout the fossil record. Read More ›
Type post Author William A. Dembski Date July 6, 2016 CategoriesPaleontologyScientific Reasoning Tagged , __tedited, biogeography, cherry-picking fallacy, common ancestry, convergence, design motifs, empirical evidence, evolutionary time, file drawer problem, fossil record, Foundation for Thought and Ethics, genetics, geological time, incomplete lineage sorting, lineages, promotions, structural motif, suppressed evidence, timeline, transitional links Why Fossils Cannot Demonstrate Darwinian Evolution William A. Dembski July 6, 2016 Paleontology, Scientific Reasoning 10 There are three fundamental problems with all examples of inferring Darwinian evolution on the basis of fossil evidence. Read More ›