 |
|
The
7 million year old skull was discovered in the Chadian desert.
|
A newly found fossil skull in Chad has confounded the proponents of the theory of evolution. Darwinist scientists confess that this fossil has
rocked the very foundations of the theory of evolution. The fairy tale of
"an evolutionary chain stretching from ape to man" has once again
collapsed.
Fossil
Discovery Widely Publicized
The
new fossil skull found in the central African country of Chad has dealt a
heavy blow to the evolutionary claims regarding the origin of man. Given
considerable space in world-renowned scientific journals and newspapers,
this new fossil has shattered the claim that "man evolved from ape-like
creatures" so doggedly maintained by Darwinists for the last 150 years.
Discovered by the French scientist Michel Brunet, the fossil was given the
name Sahelanthropus tchadensis.
The
fossil has set the cat among the pigeons in the world of Darwinism. In its
article giving news of the discovery, the world-renowned journal Nature
admitted that, "[the] new-found skull could sink our current ideas
about human evolution."
1
Daniel
Lieberman of Harvard University said that, "this [discovery] will have
the impact of a small nuclear bomb." 2
The
reason for this is that although the fossil in question is 7 million years
old, it has a more "human-like" structure (according to the
criteria evolutionists have hitherto used) than the 5 million-year-old
Australopithecus ape species that is alleged to be "mankind's oldest
ancestor."
Evolutionary
Scheme Demolished
Ever
since the 1920s, evolutionists have claimed that some characteristics of the
Australopithecus genus resembled those of human beings, for which reason
they have portrayed these extinct creatures as "man's most primitive
ancestor." A great deal of evidence disproving that thesis has emerged.
For instance, research in the 1990s revealed that Australopithecus did not
walk upright, as had been claimed, but walked with a stooped posture just
like other apes. The newly-discovered Sahelanthropus tchadensis fossil,
another ape species that lived 2 million years before Australopithecus, is
actually more "human-like" according to evolutionary criteria. In
other words, it demolishes the "evolutionary scheme."
The
essence of the matter is this: there are a large number of very different
ape species that once lived in the past and are now extinct. The skull or
skeletal structures of some of these show similarities to those of man. Yet
those similarities do not mean that these creatures have any relationship to
man. Evolutionists line up the skulls from these extinct species in a manner
required by their theory and try to come up with "a ladder from ape to
man." Yet the deeper research into the subject goes, the more it is
realized that there is no such ladder, rather different species of ape lived
at different times in the past.
Moreover,
it emerges that man came about all of a sudden, with no evolutionary process
behind him. In other words, that he was created.
Scientists
Question Evolutionist Theories
|

|
|
The
drawings of the evolutionary ladder have no scientific value.
|
John
Whitfield, in his article "Oldest Member of Human Family Found"
published in Nature on July, 11, 2002, confirms this view quoting from
Bernard Wood, an evolutionist anthropologist from George Washington
University in Washington:
"When
I went to medical school in 1963, human evolution looked like a ladder. The
ladder stepped from monkey to man through a progression of intermediates,
each slightly less ape-like than the last. Now human evolution looks like a
bush. We have a menagerie of fossil hominids... How they are related to each
other and which, if any of them, are human forebears is still
debated." 3
The
comments of Henry Gee, the senior editor of Nature and a leading
paleoanthropologist, about the newly discovered ape fossil are very
noteworthy. In his article published in The Guardian, Gee refers to the
debate about the fossil and writes:
"Whatever
the outcome, the skull shows, once and for all, that the old idea of a
'missing link' is bunk... It should now be quite plain that the very idea of
the missing link, always shaky, is now completely untenable." 4
In brief, the drawings of the "evolutionary ladder that stretches
from ape to man" that we so frequently encounter in newspapers and
magazines have no scientific value at all. They are merely propaganda from
certain circles that are blindly devoted to the theory of evolution. At the
same time as this propaganda is carried out, evidence that conflicts with
the theory of evolution is kept hidden away. In his book Icons of Evolution:
Science or Myth, Why Much of What We Teach About Evolution is Wrong, which
caused a great stir in America when it was published in 2000, the U.S.
biologist Jonathan Wells summed up that propaganda mechanism in these terms:
"The
general public is rarely informed of the deep-seated uncertainty about human
origins that is reflected in these statements by scientific experts.
Instead, we are simply fed the latest version of somebody's theory, without
being told that paleoanthropologists themselves cannot agree over it. And
typically, the theory is illustrated with fanciful drawings of cave men, or
human actors wearing heavy makeup." 5
The
Darwinist myth is now finally about to collapse. The mistaken nature of
Darwinism, itself merely a 19th century superstition, is becoming ever
clearer as science advances. The world of science is arriving at the most
important truth of all: It was God who created the universe we live in, and
everything, living or inanimate, within it.
(1)
John Whitfield, "Oldest member of human family found", Nature, 11
July 2002
(2)
D.L. Parsell, "Skull Fossil From Chad Forces Rethinking of Human
Origins", National Geographic News, July 10, 2002
(3)
John Whitfield, "Oldest member of human family found", Nature, 11
July 2002
(4)
The Guardian, 11 July 2002
(5)
Jonathan Wells, Icons of Evolution: Science or Myth, Why Much of What We
Teach About Evolution is Wrong, Washington, DC, Regnery Publishing, 2000, p.
225
Read
Also:
Harun Yahya
is the author who writes under the pen name Harun Yahya, was born in Ankara in 1956. He studied arts at Istanbul's Mimar Sinan University and philosophy at Istanbul University. Since the 1980s, the author has published many books on political, faith-related and scientific issues. Some of the books of the author have been translated into English, German, French, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, Albanian, Arabic, Polish, Russian, Bosnian, Indonesian, Turkish, Tatar, Urdu and Malay and published in the countries concerned.
www.harunyahya.com
You may e-mail the author at: info@harunyahya.com