330-million-years-old?

Posted in Transitionals, Introductory Creation Science by Ftk @ Oct 30, 2007

 

The above ”salamander-like” fossilized body imprints were recently discovered in  330-million-year-old Pennsylvanian rocks.   We’re told, in this article, that these ”foot-long amphibians lived 100 million years before the first dinosaurs.”  

I guess I’m just not seeing much difference between the 300-million-year-old ”salamander-like” creatures in comparison to actual salamanders we find today (below).

   

It just seems to me that there is no way to falsify evolution.  Evolutionists tell us that this is exactly what we would expect to find because some of these creatures would evolve to become the ancestors of dinosaurs, while some would remain in a similiar form to what we find today.  Yet, the evidence shows that organisms look the same as they did millions of years ago.   Many animals have gone extinct, and certainly animals adapt to their environments somewhat.  But, the macroevolutionary changes that scientists claim to be fact seem to stretch “facts” beyond recognition.

UPDATE: I found another article on this find, and low and behold they found some other interesting fossils in the same rock formation:

Also found in rocks from the same formation and of the same age are footprints of other relatively large animals and fossils of insects and plants, Lucas explained. There is even a saucer-sized footprint of an unknown vertebrate that suggests larger four-footed beasts lived far earlier than ever before suspected.

“It’s bigger than anything discovered in the bone record,” said Lucas.

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