Living Fossils
Ant
fossil preserved in amber, some 100 million
years old. No different from the ants in
our day. |
There is no difference between
fossil life forms dating back hundreds of millions
of years and their counterparts living today.
This fact utterly disproves the evolutionary claim.
The theory of evolution argues
that living things are in constant change, continuously
developing through coincidences. The fossil record,
however, indicates just the opposite. When we
look at fossils, we see that there is no difference
between life forms that lived hundreds of millions
of years ago and their counterparts living today.
Modern fish, reptiles and mammals are exactly
the same as the fish, reptiles and mammals that
appeared for the first time on the Earth. Some
living species are driven to extinction, but no
species has turned into another species.
This makes it clear that all
living species were created by God to be quite
distinct from each other, and they have not undergone
any evolution since the day they were created.
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NO CHANGE IN STRUCTURE
FOR 300 MILLION YEARS
Called Triops Cancriformis
in scientific literature, this shrimp-like
creature has not undergone any change
for 300 million years.
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FISH
The fish fossil dating
back 200 million years (below) shows that
ancient fish and their modern counterparts
are not different from each other.
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STARFISH
A 400 million-year-old
starfish fossil and a living starfish
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NAUTILUS IS ALWAYS
THE SAME
The invertebrate species
called Nautilus, which proliferates in
the seas of today, is also found in abundance
in fossil form in the Cambrian strata
dating back 520 million years. Since the
day of its creation, the Nautilus has
not undergone any evolution.
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MAY BUG UNCHANGED
The living specimen
of the may bug of the baetidae class and
its 220 million-year-old fossil stored
in amber. A comparison of the two shows
that this bug has not undergone any evolution
throughout the ages.
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PLANTS ARE ALSO THE
SAME
"The evolution of
plants" is also nothing but a tale. On
the side, you see a living specimen of
a plant species called acer monspessulanum
and its 30 million-year-old fossil.
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