Recently the number of different species, sub-species, variations have been increasing exponentially. In the past identification of species was fairly simple, and of course over time more and more fossils have been discovered. At one time feathered bird like dinosaurs were based on a few fossils now there thousands. Fifty years ago the fossils of human would fit in a card board box, and now they could fill a museum. The following article addresses the problem with recent discoveries of dinosaurs. The number of dinosaur fossil discoveries have increased exponentially, and new species, sub-species, varieties and genera of the dinosaurs has greatly increased.
The problem of what is a species has been also compounded by a closer look at the diversity in today's world. More on this, but first the article . . .
It is an interesting paper with neat graphs showing the exponential number of discoveries since 2000.
For a change this is a REAL science thread, and no rabbit fossils were found. The pile of non-existent evidence is getting deeper.
The problem of what is a species has been also compounded by a closer look at the diversity in today's world. More on this, but first the article . . .
It is an interesting paper with neat graphs showing the exponential number of discoveries since 2000.
For a change this is a REAL science thread, and no rabbit fossils were found. The pile of non-existent evidence is getting deeper.
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