Another Amazing Leap for Evolutionists
Scientists who continue to hold to the teetering theory of evolution never cease to amaze me. The lengths to which they will go to “prove” their theory is utterly incredible. It continues with a new “amazing” discovery that helps “bridge the gap” between aquatic life in the ancient past and modern birds.
Evolutionists have contended for years that most species of birds descended from aquatic life some time in the distant past. Now a new discovery is leading evolutionists to think that all bird species alive today (over 10,000) came from water life.
Voice of America begins their report this way:
All birds, even ones that perch in trees, may have descended from waterfowl. That is the conclusion of a study of well preserved 110-million-year-old fossils of the earliest known modern bird. The specimens were found in northwestern China.
The report goes on to describe the discovery of a nearly complete fossil (the head and upper neck is missing) of a loon-like bird. The amazing leap evolutionists must make, however, is the one between water foul and flying foul. This bird helps close that gap. How?
It looks somewhat like a duck.
That’s it!?! And, since the bird is strikingly “modern,” according to the evolutionary way of thinking, it helps shrink the gap and prove that birds came from water creatures.
What? Is that what evolutionists have to go by? Could it not be that this is a duck or a loon? Could it not be a creature much like them that is extinct? Why must it be the “missing foul link”? Because that’s what evolutionists need for it to be!
Once again, we do not have science. We have people searching for proofs and jumping to conclusions. When will they learn?
[NOTE: to read the entire Voice of America article, click here.]


