A particulary important and still contentious discovery is Archaeopteryx c, found in the Jurassic Solnhofen Limestone of southern Germany, which is marked by rare but exceptionally well preserved fossils. Archaeopteryx is considered by many to be the first bird, being of about 150 million years of age. It is actually intermediate between the birds that we see flying around in our backyards and the predatory dinosaurs like Deinonychus. In fact, one skeleton of Archaeopteryx that had poorly preserved feathers was originally described as a skeleton of a small bipedal dinosaur, Compsognathus. A total of seven specimens of the bird are known at this time.
It has long been accepted that Archaeopteryx was a transitional form between birds and reptiles, and that it is the earliest known bird. Lately, scientists have realized that it bears even more resemblance to its ancestors, the Maniraptora, than to modern birds; providing a strong phylogenetic link between the two groups. It is one of the most important fossils ever discovered.
Unlike all living birds, Archaeopteryx had a full set of teeth, a rather flat sternum ("breastbone"), a long, bony tail, gastralia ("belly ribs"), and three claws on the wing which could have still been used to grasp prey (or maybe trees). However, its feathers, wings, furcula ("wishbone") and reduced fingers are all characteristics of modern birds.
I am wondering how strong the case is for the standard history of evolution. — Gregory
how much do we know about each species we have unearthed? — Gregory
each species has many many features that contribute to survival so to prove progression you would have to know all the adaptive survival mechanism of each ring in the evolution to prove there is increase in survivability. — Gregory
That's not to mention the out of Africa theory which I absolutely do not believe — MAYAEL
The fossils are real no doubt but the rest of paleontology is imagination. This isn't a flaw as much as it's a challenge worthy of true genius. — TheMadFool
Do we know enough to say for sure what had happened or is there some wishful thinking going on? — Gregory
Aah. Our anti-science expert speaks again. — T Clark
I'm just the 10th man. — TheMadFool
It is my understanding that the African origin of humans is well established. What do you know (about this) that I don't. — T Clark
Perhaps you think a little too highly of yourself. — T Clark
What is the out of ocean theory?I would be more inclined to believe a out of the ocean theory instead of out of Africa — MAYAEL
.I just mentioned the Israeli government's strategy of always ensuring that there's someone who refuses to believe even if there's a mountain of evidential support to point out what the Delphic Oracle, 2500 years ago, warned us against: Surety brings ruin.↪TheMadFool So you disagree when people present good, solid arguments. Good to know. Where has this got you in life? I am not facetious. Maybe you got much farther with this than one other would expect. — god must be atheist
But doubt divides. In unity is force. There is no unity without surety. Time is money. If you live your life to the predictions made 2500 years ago, you must live an interesting life. "A great empire will fall." To one side it brought ruin; to the other side, victory. You concentrate on the losing side. But the winning side is just as important. Ruin is very seldom unilateral. You have to choose your position carefully. A position of betting against a winning horse is a position, but I am not sure if it brings you any success. But I may be wrong.Surety brings ruin. — TheMadFool
someone who refuses to believe even if there's a mountain of evidential support to point out what the Delphic Oracle, 2500 years ago, warned us against: Surety brings ruin. — TheMadFool
Being sure of the Delphic Oraculum's truth demands of one to be doubtful. Doubting it makes one to be sure.
This is a good paradox.
How is a life lived in the spirit of a paradox? — god must be atheist
The paradox in the Delphic Oracle's words, "surety brings ruin" isn't as interesting or important as the honesty that it exudes. — TheMadFool
But it has made you into being a liar. Where is the honesty and virtue in that? — god must be atheist
Whoa... where is the tenth man? You are supposed to be OPPOSING all the points, not agree with them.All TPFians are liars! Chew on that, god must be atheist. — TheMadFool
Whoa... where is the tenth man? You are supposed to be OPPOSING all the points, not agree with them. — god must be atheist
I bet they don't. A tenth man's day is not always honky-dory. BTW, I didn't use any facts or assumptions that you hadn't provided. But that's okay, I won't resent your bitterness — god must be atheist
Why not more evidence? only a tiny portion of fossil-bearing rock has been, or can be investigated. Most of the fossil-bearing rock are too deeply buried under over-burden. — Bitter Crank
Not true. The 10th man's job is to simply disagree whether or not he has good reasons to do so. — TheMadFool
I think perhaps you misunderstand the role of the 10th man, although that does explain a lot about some of your ideas. — T Clark
Si vis pacem, para bellum. — Publius Flavius Vegetius Renatus
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