May 19, 2009

Archaeology find "confirms" Darwinian Evolution?


A team of scientists has dubbed an ancient skeleton of what they term a "lemur monkey" -whom they affectionately call Ida- as "the eight wonder of the world." The team of scientists led by professor Jorn Hurum of Norway's National History Museum claim that Ida is 47 million years old and is believed by the scientists to be the supposed missing link in Evolution, which they claim "confirms" Darwin's theory of Evolution.

According to the
SkyNews piece, Hurum said, "This fossil is really a part of our history; this is part of our evolution, deep, deep back into the aeons of time, 47 million years ago. It's part of our evolution that's been hidden so far, it's been hidden because all the other specimens are so incomplete. They are so broken there's almost nothing to study and now this wonderful fossil appears and it makes the story so much easier to tell, so it's really a dream come true."

Another scientist, Sir David Attenborough said, "The link they would have said up to now is missing - well it's no longer missing." The scientists believe Ida is the so-called missing link because they claim she dates back to the Eocene period and is both a Lemur (one group of early primates) and a monkey (second group of early primates that developed into humans).

Evidently these scientists concur that Ida once and for all settles the debate over the truth of Darwinian Evolution.

Answers in Genesis, however, comes to the opposite and more reasonable conclusion noting:

1. Nothing about this fossil suggests it is anything other than an extinct, lemur-like creature

2. A fossil can never show evolution

3. Similarities can never show evolution

4. The remarkable preservation is a hallmark of rapid burial

5. If evolution were true, there would be real transitional forms

6. Evolutionists only open up about the lack of fossil missing links once a new one is found


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