The Fossil Record by Dr. Don Patton Ph.D.
Sign UpThis is a 5 minute preview of a 1 hour and 9 minute video
Install Web Player Beta to watch the full video in your browser or download it to your PCYou're watching a full 1 hour and 9 minute video using the Veoh Web Player
To download the original quality video, select the Download Options link below- By:
- BereanBeacon
- Source:
- YouTube.com
- Description
- Dr. Don R. Patton 813 Trails Pkwy Garland, TX 75043 (972) 279-5325 dpatton693@aol.com FAX (972) 613-7008 http://www.bible.ca MORE videos - http://www.bible.ca/tracks/videos-quotes.htm CARL DUNBAR, Yale, "Although the comparative study of living animals and plants may give very convincing circumstantial evidence, fossils provide the only historical, documentary evidence that life has evolved from simpler to more and more complex forms." HISTORICAL GEOLOGY, p. 47 S. M. Stanley, Johns Hopkins, "It is doubtful whether, in the absence of fossils, the idea of evolution would represent anything more than an outrageous hypothesis. ...The fossil record and only the fossil record provides direct evidence of major sequential changes in the Earth's biota." NEW EVOLUTIONARY TIMETABLE, p.72, 1981 STEPHEN J. GOULD, HARVARD, "The Cambrian Explosion occurred in a geological moment, and we have reason to think that all major anatomical designs may have made their evolutionary appearance at that time. ...not only the phylum Chordata itself, but also all its major divisions, arose within the Cambrian Explosion. So much for chordate uniqueness... Contrary to Darwin's expectation that new data would reveal gradualistic continuity with slow and steady expansion, all major discoveries of the past century have only heightened the massiveness and geological abruptness of this formative event..." Nature, Vol.377, 26 10/95, p.682 Preston Cloud & Martin F. Glaessner, "Ever since Darwin, the geologically abrupt appearance and rapid diversification of early animal life have fascinated biologist and students of Earth history alike....This interval, plus Early Cambrian, was the time during which metazoan life diversified into nearly all of the major phyla and most of the invertebrate classes and orders subsequently known." Science, Aug.27, 1982 RICHARD Monastersky, Earth Science Ed., Science News, "The remarkably complex forms of animals we see today suddenly appeared. ...This moment, right at the start of the Earth's Cambrian Period...marks th
- Language:
- English
Would you like to comment?
Sign Up Now for a free account or Log In.