A Pikaia fossil, one of the oldest known vertebrates, and its estimated anatomy |
Evolutionists have been digging up the fossil strata for the last 140 years in their search for these imaginary life forms. Millions of invertebrate fossils have been turned up, and millions of fish fossils. But nobody has yet come across a single intermediate form.
Gerald T. Todd is an evolutionist paleontologist:
All three subdivisions of the bony fishes first appear in the fossil record at approximately the same time. . . . How did they originate? What allowed them to diverge so widely?. . . And why is there no trace of earlier, intermediate forms? 191
J. R. Norman is in the Department of Zoology at the British Museum of Natural History:
The geological record has so far provided no evidence as to the origin of the fishes. 192
Gordon Rattray Taylor is an evolutionist author and Chief Science Advisor at BBC:
. . . there are no intermediate forms between finned and limbed creatures in the fossil collections of the world. 193
Dr. F. D. Ommaney is an English scientist of the 1930s:
How this earliest chordate stock evolved, what stages of development it went through to eventually give rise to truly fish-like creatures, we do not know. Between the Cambrian, when it probably originated, and the Ordovician, when the first fossils of animals with really fish-like characteristics appeared, there is a gap of perhaps 100 million years, which we will probably never be able to fill. 194
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