Originally Posted by Fubarski


It's much easier to wonder, and try and talk about other sciences, than it is to justify the waste of time that is the theory of evolution, isn't it

Why don't we just stick to the theory of evolution, and all its practical uses?

You start.



Okay here are a few things I know as certain true facts.
1: Earth had a Mesozoic era which lasted from 245 million years ago until 66 million years ago

2: During the Mesazoic period reptiles were the dominant species upon Earth.

3: Over the course of almost 200 million years many types of dinosaurs existed, gained dominance, went extinct, and were replaced by other types, families, and genera.

4: 66 million years ago Dinosaurs suddenly ceased to exist, with the exception of a few bird like species and crocodile types.

5: This event usually referenced as the K-T Extinction Event is coincidental to a seven mile diameter bolide which struck the Yucatan Peninsula at the same point in time.

6: 75% to 80% of known terrestrial plant and animal species went extinct at that time, 66 million years ago.

7: A few small mammals were extant prior the K-T event. Some such species are known to have survived.

Would you deny any of these statements to be factual?

Absent evolution, how did the many varied species of dinosaurs come about over the course of those millennia as families died out and were replaced by other families?

Absent evolution, how did those little mouse like creatures become equine, and elephant, and feline, and canine, and bovine, and ursus, and cervidae, and simian, and hominid?

At what point in this history was Man dropped into the mix? What became of CroMagnon? Of Neanderthal? Of Denosovan?

ETA: No, the more appropriate question would be, "Where did these and all the other species of extinct hominids come from? Failed prototypes, perhaps?

Why do modern humans carry Neanderthal DNA?

Last edited by Idaho_Shooter; 08/12/19.

People who choose to brew up their own storms bitch loudest about the rain.