[The previous discussion involved the lack of transitional forms in
the fossil record]
Dr. Kurt Wise: I think it’s important to extend this claim to
all phyla and all classes. Because in fact not only is it true that
the major invertebrate phyla and classes lack intermediates or
ancestors and a good ancestral series in the record, but that’s also
true of every phylum in the record, whether you’re talking about
bacteria, whether you talking about algae, whether you’re talking
about plants, fungi, they all lack the nice ancestral line to run up
to them.
In fact there is a gap between them and any proposed ancestor. A
gap that’s reflective of the gap that exists today. We have a grouping
of organisms today with gaps between the major groups that is
reflective of the fossil record—very same thing you see in fossil
record. It’s consistent with the idea that in fact, the major groups
of organisms, all phyla and all classes, had independent polyphyletic
origins, that they came into existence suddenly and independently,
without ancestors.
Dr. John Ankerberg: From what you’re saying, it would seem that
what George Gaylord Simpson (who was at Harvard and who has now passed
away), what he said makes sense. He said, "The reason for abrupt
appearances and gaps is not the imperfection of the fossil record.
With over 200 million catalogued specimens of about 250,000 fossil
species, many evolutionists/paleontologists argued that the fossil
record is sufficient. In part, the role of paleontology and
evolutionary research has been defined narrowly because of a false
belief, tracing back to Darwin and his early followers, that the
fossil record is woefully incomplete."
According to Gaylord Simpson, "actually the record of sufficiently
high quality to allow us to undertake certain kinds of analysis
meaningfully at the level of the species." It goes on, "It remains
true, as every paleontologist knows, that most new species, genera,
and families, and that nearly all new categories above the level of
families appear in the record suddenly and are not led up to by known
gradual, completely continuous transitional sequences."
Wise: It’s often been argued as counter-claim to the claim we
just made. We just made the claim that there never were any
intermediates between the major groups. Many people have claimed
that’s because there is a lack of evidence in the fossil record—the
big gaps in the fossil record. As Simpson maintains and as others have
maintained since Simpson’s quote there, the fossil record is, in fact,
very adequate.
We talked about the Cambrian explosion—well, immediately before the
Tommotian as part of the Cambrian—we have the Ediacaran fauna. Now
these are in rocks, inside these rocks are found creatures that have
no hard parts, they are soft-bodied organisms. It has been argued by
some that the reason we don’t have ancestors to the Cambrian
invertebrates is because the fossil record is very bad and we didn’t
preserve those things, mainly because they didn’t have any shells.
Well, we have the Ediacaran fauna that preserve soft-bodied organisms,
indicating that if ancestors were there, they should have been
preserved. And there are many other examples throughout of the fossil
record of this same sort of thing.
Ankerberg: Do many people bring up objections in this area?
Wise: I guess you can always say that. I guess it’s commonly
claimed that there are gaps here and there; maybe this tiny little gap
that appears in the Cambrian is enough to have allowed for the origin
for such and such a group.
Dr. Steve Austin: Some evolutionists have claimed that the
reason that we have the abrupt appearance of life in the lower
Cambrian strata is because there is an erosional break there of some
maybe immense duration where the fossil evidence has been removed for
the origin of life. Over the years, especially since Darwin talked
about the imperfection of the record and possibility of erosional
breaks, geologists have become quite confident that we have a thick
sequence of strata there that should show the development of simple
multi-cellular organisms without much hard parts into the
multi-cellular organism with hard parts, so we realize that we do have
an adequate fossil record in many cases.
Ankerberg: So up to this point, we are saying that the
physical evidence for the creationist theory is there and the
physical evidence for the evolutionary theory is not there.
Austin: Yes. The creationist would propose abrupt appearance
and then once something appeared it stayed pretty much the same. And
that’s what I see. I’m an empiricist. I look at what is there and it
seems to me like it’s an adequate record of the abrupt appearance and
continuity of life forms.
Wise: Now, let’s go one step further. We have the group in
place. Let’s look at the oldest fossil in that group. And let’s see if
that fossil is the kind of organism that you would expect to be the
ancestor for the whole group. In point of fact, it’s only very, very
rare that that first fossil is a fossil that you might even propose is
an intermediate between that group and any other. One of the very few
examples, and there are less than probably half a dozen of these
examples among the major phyla and classes, is archaeopteryx.
The failure, though, of each of one these intermediates, so-called
intermediates, the ones that are the oldest representatives of the
given phylum or class, is that although they are intermediate in their
combination of characters, for example, you look at archaeopteryx, and
you have a creature that looks like a bird, in fact it’s classified as
a bird, primarily because it has feathers, it has wings, it functions
therefore, as a bird. That’s generally how you define a bird, at least
if you’ve only got bones and feathers.
But in addition to that, you’ve got characters that are rarely
found in birds, among birds. You have teeth, and you have claws and
the wings. Now you occasionally find them among birds, but the fact
that we find these characters which exist in reptiles, or the
ancestors of birds, specifically the dinosaurs, it’s thought that
since archaeopteryx sits here as the ancestor or the oldest bird, it
has characters that are in common with birds, very commonly with
birds, but also some characters that are more commonly found among
reptiles.
The problem is that the teeth and the claws or any other character
you find on archaeopteryx seems to be a fully functional character. In
other words, it is not a half-formed, or a half-lost tooth, or a
half-formed or a half-lost claw, it seems to be a functional claw, a
functional tooth, and a functional feather. And in fact that is the
characteristic of all these. Even if that first fossil is one that you
might say looks like an intermediate, it fails in a major way for
being an intermediate because, although it’s an interesting
combination of characters, something we might call a mosaic or a
chimera, the characters themselves are not intermediate.
(Dr. Kurt Wise completed his doctoral degree in paleontology at
Harvard. Dr. Steve Austin received his Ph.D. (Geology) at Pennsylvania
State University, University Park, PA, in 1979.)