Showing a Bit of Backbone 18
yevrah writes "Palaeontologists in South Australia have found the earliest occurance of a fossil displaying primitive vertebrate. Described as something like a tadpole that probably wriggled through the bottom of the ocean this little critter is a likely missing link between invertebrates and fish."
Scientists not quite right... (Score:3, Funny)
Actually, it is an example of early spammers and a divergence from the evolutionary timeline leading up to humans.
Re:vertebrae? (Score:1)
Commentator really gets it wrong (Score:2, Informative)
She ought to read Stephen Jay Gould's work before writing about science. Her statement, in fact, is very much wrong. The common supposition that there is a steady march from simple forms to more complex ones is well debunked by Gould. There is plenty of evidence that the same morphology has been developed by several species. Some survive. Others are pruned. Likewise, there is no reason to be
Re:Commentator really gets it wrong (Score:2)
It is difficult to believe this is serious. Most invertebrates are more than "blobs" and many have "stiffening" even if they do not have backbones.
Re:Commentator really gets it wrong (Score:1)
Re:Commentator really gets it wrong (Score:2)
She ought to read Stephen Jay Gould's work before writing about science. Her statement, in fact, is very much wrong. The common supposition that there is a steady march from simple forms to more complex ones is well debunked by Gould.
She was quoting someone else.
And what do you think is wrong with that statement anyway? We have a complex body plan and we have evolutionary ancestors. It is pe