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Old 05-10-2003, 09:33 PM   #761
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Quote:
Originally posted by Jack the Bodiless
Ed:

Ambulocetus was basically the mammalian eqivalent of a crocodile. From here:


One million years after the existence of Pakicetus, a relative named Ambulocetus natans took up life at the seas edge. This species was also covered in fur but was further adapted for aquatic life: it had thick splayed out legs, four toed feet and at hoof at the end of each toe.


If a mammalian crocodile is a "whale with grippers", then I am a gazelle with hands.
I was referring to Basilosaurus, see above. And if what you say is true then how come crocodiles didnt evolve into the reptilian equivalent of a whale?
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Old 05-10-2003, 09:46 PM   #762
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Originally posted by Jack the Bodiless

Ed: Ambulocetus has hooves, this makes it extremely unlikely it spent any time in the water. Also there is no evidence of a transition from hooves to fins. Therefore it is unlikely to be a transitional form. Just because we hypothesize action by a designer in areas where there are no transitions does not mean we stop looking. All scientific theories are tentative.


jtb: Ambulocetus had little hooves on its toes, just as modern hippopotami do (hippos are the closest modern land-dwelling relatives of whales). So hippos don't spend any time in the water?

And, yes, their legs gradually become fins in later forms: you obviously know this already, because you mentioned whales with "grippers". So you're lying again.
Hippos don't have hooves, those are called toenails. Ungulates have hooves. Also ambulocetus has a fully developed pelvis, there are no transitions from a fully developed lpelvis to no pelvis in whales. And grippers are neither legs nor fins.
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Old 05-11-2003, 03:44 AM   #763
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Originally posted by Ed
I was referring to Basilosaurus, see above. And if what you say is true then how come crocodiles didnt evolve into the reptilian equivalent of a whale?
Why should they? Crocodilians have an excellent, basic design to begin with. Indeed, they can be called 'living fossils' (I really don't like that term), along with the tuatara, the coelacanth, and the cockroach.

Of course, they've evolved a bit, becoming much smaller (as if a hungery, 20+ foot Nilotic can be called 'small'), and have had considerable species diversification. But over all, they have fit into their ecological niche(s) so well that a radical change to something whale-like has simply not been necessary.

Interestingly, crocs are pretty much ambush predators. Wholly aquatic mammals are much more active in pursuing prey.

For a real back to-the-sea evolution saga, happening right before our very eyes, check out the marine iguanas of the Galapagos Islands.

doov
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Old 05-11-2003, 09:13 PM   #764
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Originally posted by Oolon Colluphid
Ambulocetus natans:





And it having hooves is relevant to where it lived, how? Please explain, then, why the (not closely related) dugongs and manatees have toenails.

I suggest you look into these buggers’ ears. (I’d tell you about them now, but, typically, I took my copy of Carroll’s Patterns and Processes home yesterday after using it on the BBC’s forum )

DT

(Edited for stupid tyop)
True hooves are not very good swimming tools. And toe nails are not hooves. And see above about that well developed pelvis.
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Old 05-12-2003, 01:33 AM   #765
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I was referring to Basilosaurus, see above. And if what you say is true then how come crocodiles didnt evolve into the reptilian equivalent of a whale?
There WERE reptilian equivalents of whales! Have you honestly never heard of icthyosaurs, plesiosaurs, mosasaurs etc?

They became extinct when the dinosaurs did.
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Hippos don't have hooves, those are called toenails. Ungulates have hooves. Also ambulocetus has a fully developed pelvis, there are no transitions from a fully developed lpelvis to no pelvis in whales. And grippers are neither legs nor fins.
Hooves ARE toenails.

And where did you get the notion that whales don't have pelvic bones? They DO have vestigial pelvises! And there are transitional forms which cover that.

Are you just making this up as you go along?
Quote:
True hooves are not very good swimming tools. And toe nails are not hooves. And see above about that well developed pelvis.
Falsehoods don't magically become true by repetition.
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Old 05-12-2003, 03:51 AM   #766
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Ed: Ambulocetus has hooves, this makes it extremely unlikely it spent any time in the water.

Oolon: And it having hooves is relevant to where it lived, how?

True hooves are not very good swimming tools.
Well that’s just tough, Ed.

“Toes are terminated by a short phalanx carrying a convex hoof, as in mesonychids...”

Ambulocetus had hooves.

and

“The same bed also contains impressions of leaves and abundant Turritella and other marine molluscs, indicating that the carcass was buried in a shallow sea.“

It plainly spent time in the sea.

(Thewissen, Science, vol 263 p 210-212.)

So Ed, what does it take for you to admit error?

TTFN, Oolon
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Old 05-12-2003, 04:48 AM   #767
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I think what we're seeing here is a fascinating example of how creationist falsehoods develop: one creationist makes an imaginative leap, then the next leaps on from where the first one landed.

Whales have pelvises, and this poses grave problems for creationism. So one creationist is forced to deny that the whale's pelvis actually is a pelvis. The next one accepts as "fact" that whales do NOT have a pelvis, and leaps on from there: "whales should have pelvises if they evolved from land creatures, but they don't, and this is a problem for evolution". Ed has, in fact, managed a truly impressive double leap, moving on to a totally unfounded claim that "there are no transitional forms" in which the pelvis was becoming vestigial. Ed prefers to believe that it abruptly vanished, therefore (in Ed's universe) it did.

The result is a new level of creationist absurdity: rather like arguing that dogs and bears can't be related because dogs have fur and bears don't.

Ed, I genuinely want to know if your own extension of the "pelvis denial" originated with you. Will you admit to making it up, or claim some "authority" from which you got it? If the latter, will this "authority" actually support your position, or will this be further wishful thinking on your part?
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Old 05-12-2003, 09:42 PM   #768
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Originally posted by Duvenoy
Ed my friend, this is preposrerous. You can't have it "Depending on the organism." You can't change the definition of kind as you go from beast to beast, although many creationists seem to do to do exactly that. It ain't science, and I suspect that it ain't good religion, as well. Also, "probably' ain't hittin' on shit either. Not when you're trying to describe a term in such common usage. Is it is, or is it not? And what's the definition of, 'is'?

Surely, bro, you can do better than this.

As for whale evolution, it is well documented. I'd put up a link or two, but I think they've already in this thread.... somewhere..... in the rambling, bewildering streams and sloughs of our conversations.

(sigh)

doov

Taxonomy among both evolutionists and creationists is a very complex and detailed process. As we learn more about genetics we can gain greater confidence of how organisms should be classified. And we can learn what may have been the original kinds. Also the fossil record helps in this area. We have already learned that some organisms have wider morphological forms than others. So "probably" is quite justified.
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Old 05-13-2003, 04:00 AM   #769
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Taxonomy among both evolutionists and creationists is a very complex and detailed process.
Not for creationists, it isn't. Creationist "taxonomy" is based on the principle of the "200% critter". If a transitional form can be judged to resemble creature A more than creature B, it is "100% A". If it's closer to B, it's "100% B". If it's squarely between the two, it's both. Thus, archaeopteryx is claimed by creationists to be 100% reptile and 100% bird, and Homo Erectus is 100% ape and 100% human (and hence 200% primate).
Quote:
As we learn more about genetics we can gain greater confidence of how organisms should be classified. And we can learn what may have been the original kinds.
No, we will not. Why do you use the future tense here? The research has been done, and creationism is dead (or, rather, even more dead).
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Old 05-13-2003, 07:41 PM   #770
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Quote:
Originally posted by Doubting Didymus

Originally posted by Ed
The biblical evidence says that he can control them only indirectly and when God allows them.

dd: I'm going to call you on that one. Cite this evidence, please.

The book of Job.
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