| Subject: |
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A real "Let's See How Evolution Works" game |
| Name: |
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who is your creator |
| Date Posted: |
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Feb 25, 08 - 7:48 AM |
| IP Address: |
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75.72.61.158 |
| Email: |
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info@whoisyourcreator.com |
| Message: |
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Since evolutionists claim that marsupials parted ways over 180 million years ago, how did the placental counterparts of the marsupial mammals miraculously 'evolve' the same set of genes?
“The researchers were surprised to find that placental and marsupial mammals have largely the same set of genes for making proteins. Instead, much of the difference lies in the controls that turn genes on and off.”
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/05/070510-opossum-dna.html
Keep in mind that if you choose to use the excuse of ‘niches’ producing the same novel molecular changes, these organisms supposedly evolved in different continents about half way through their ‘evolution.’
Here are just a few examples for you to research. Let me know if you want more:
Tasmanian wolf (Thylacinus cynocephalus) is a marsupial that looked like the placental wolf.
The Flying Phalanger (Petaurus) is a marsupial that looks like the placental flying squirrel. |
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