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Posted

does anybody know where i can find a complete copy of the ladder of evolution? or does anybody know the complete ladder?

Posted

'Ladder' implies discrete stages, not a constant state of transition, so I'd disagree with such a thing validly existing by today's science.

Posted

so how do i know the order things evolved in, how do we know for sure that the jellyfish was the first multicelular animal to evolve? what scale do we have for evolution?

Posted

We asked the giant jellyfish. He's rather accommodating when it comes to genealogy. It started with Gregory, the amoeba, who just decided to become a jellyfish.

 

Isn't evolution fun?

Posted

well, i guess that would work, know where i can some of those, i'd say more like homo sapien sapiens, but i'd like one that goes back to the first single celled organisms.

Posted
well, i guess that would work, know where i can some of those, i'd say more like homo sapien sapiens, but i'd like one that goes back to the first single celled organisms.

 

Uhm, for the moment ignoring the obvious fossil gaps, the charts you desire would be huge(size and lenghtwise).

Posted

In that case, let me see what kind of graphs I can find(although I'm pressed for time, so nothing will happen 'till late tonight or tomorrow).

In the mean time, I suggest you look up a man named Carl von Linne, and a bit of his work.

Posted

I tried searching on the net (i was looking for the human ones), all i ever ended up with traced human evolution at best from the primate stage forwards......could not find anything beggining at a uni-cellular organism

Posted
does anybody know where i can find a complete copy of the ladder of evolution? or does anybody know the complete ladder?

 

the ladder of evolution should have died when darwin wrote origins, it simply doesn't exist. The correct term is cladogram, and it is more like a bush. There are no "higher or lower" forms, just forms that are adapted to their niche, or becoming extinct.

Posted
the ladder of evolution should have died when darwin wrote origins, it simply doesn't exist.

True, if the fossil gaps were much smaller than they are, it would have been possible to make one very large and complex tree.

  • 4 weeks later...
Posted

Xenoturbella bocki is a worm. It is the most primitive existing member of the group to which humans belong, called the deuterostomes. This is what we evolved from 500 million years ago, as did all mammals, fish, starfish and worms.

 

You might search, then, at two stages : pre- and post- Xenoturbella bocki.

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