(August 5, 2011 at 12:52 am)Godschild Wrote: Third you have nothing, no one has recovered an eye from dinosaurs or any other animal perivious to them. Please show those ancient eyes that have been so well preserved over millions of years.
We don’t need to recover an intact eye from a dinosaur. We have living examples. Eye spots can be found in some forms of green algae and several other types of single celled organism like euglenids right now. Eye pits are found in many types of flat worms. The nautilus has pin hole eyes. Some gastropods and annelids have spherical lensed eyes. Most land vertebrate eyes have a refractive cornea.
We can also deduce many of the characteristics of dinosaur eyes from the features of their fossilized skulls. The size, shape and location of the opening in the skull gives us information about dinosaur eyes. We can also recreate 3d models of dinosaur brains from the shape of the skull. This allows us to determine the size and shape of the occipital lobe region of the cerebrum. This type of information allows us to determine if a certain species of dinosaur relied more on vision, olfactory or hearing the most. None of that really matters though since mammals and therefore humans didn’t evolve from dinosaurs. Dinosaurs and mammals each evolved from a separate branch of decedents of an early reptile/protoreptile/amphibian that laid water proof eggs.
I’d like to suggest that you spend a little time learning what science really thinks about evolution instead of depending on your preacher or people from the Discovery Institute. I’d bet that would be a waste of time though because I’m sure others have made similar suggestions to no avail before me. It would be nice though if you had a clue. It might help you formulate an argument that didn’t involve a straw man or simply shouting “You can’t prove it!” over and over again.
Save a life. Adopt a greyhound.
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