Defusing Cambrian Explosion Excuses, Part 2
Life on Cambrian Miaolingian sea, WikiComm / Zhixin Sun et. al. (CC BY 4.0), modified at PhotoFunia |
When confronted with the argument from the sudden appearance of animal body plans in the Cambrian Explosion about 540-515 million years ago (e.g., early arthropods like the featured trilobite Redlichia), the newest fad among anti-ID activists and hardcore Darwinists is to boldly deny that this event ever happened. A good example is the silly rant by YouTuber Dave Farina against Stephen Meyer’s book Darwin’s Doubt. These deniers of the well-established scientific consensus rest their argument on the recent publications of a few maverick paleontologists, who indeed made similar claims about the Cambrian Explosion and the Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event being nothing but a mirage, i.e., an artifact of incomplete preservation, undersampling, and sampling bias.
The rest can be dug up at "Fossil Friday: Did the Cambrian Explosion Really Happen?" Come back for the final post in the series, written by Mr. Coppedge.
Several things are happening in this post. First, another rewriting of textbooks because oxygen didn't cause life to arise on Earth the way secularists thought. So sad, they had expected oxygen to be the instigator of the Cambrian Explosion and other things. In addition, the explosion get worse for those who wish to dilute the explosion by tampering with the time frame. To read all about it, see "From Bad to Worse for Darwinism, as New Cambrian Explosion Finds Arrive."