rowyn: (Default)
[personal profile] rowyn
I found an article on the theory of punctuated equilibrium, which it turns out I massively mangled in my previous post on evolution. Or, rather, didn't address at all. What I described as "leap from one species to brand-new species in a single generation" is known as "macromutationism," and has little, if any, following. "Punctuated equilibrium" theorizes that new species evolve from previous species 'quickly' only in the geological sense. "Quick" in this case means mere millenia, five to ten thousand years. Darwin's original theory offered "gradualism", or change in species over millions of years.

Puntuctuated equilibrium fits the facts of the fossil record pretty well, and isn't as unbelieveable as macromutationism. Haven't read enough on it to say whether it's provable or disprovable based on evidence, but it seems to be the basis for useful research, so I'm happier with it. :)

Date: 2002-11-19 09:19 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] level-head.livejournal.com
Arrgh. A long post lost. Probably happier for readers, anyway. ];-)

Briefly: Birds didn't hatch from lizard eggs; the transitionn took place over millions of years, and there's no way to draw a bright line and say this is bird, that is reptile. In a number of respects, birds are still very reptilian. Now we know why.

Your last paragraph sums it up nicely.

I would be very surprised to see "macromutationism" supported by an evolutionary scientist. I cannot imagine it, if that's what it purports to be. It is certainly not what punk eek suggests.

===|==============/ Level Head

Re:

Date: 2002-11-19 05:38 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] level-head.livejournal.com
You might conclude that, depending upon the characteristics of the two snails. It is limited, as different species, genetically isolated, look to us like the same species at first in the fossil record. We only call them different species when the bones are different, when in fact speciation happens long before significant (or any) bone differences.

For example, if there is an unusual aspect of calcium deposition on the inside surfaces, or a curious shape in the chamberization (all fossilizable) and B has this like A does but no others, it's a good bet that B came from A. The details make all the difference, of course.

The effect of this is to make species appearance more "sudden" than it really is. The B snail could have had different feeding habits, coloration, tidewater instead of deepwater for marine species, all sorts of possibilities that don't necessarily reflect in the shells themselves.

Gould was a mollusk fellow; they spoke deeply to him. I'm more of a reptile guy myself. ];)

===|==============/ Level Head

Re:

Date: 2002-11-19 06:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] level-head.livejournal.com
I'm sorry; I was genuinely trying to helpful.

I certainly was not making fun of you! In fact, I'm treating as a serious question something that you're not quite intending to be serious, perhaps? ];)

I'm going to go look at the thread and see if I can figure out where I've gone wrong.

===|==============/ Level Head

January 2026

S M T W T F S
    12 3
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031

Most Popular Tags

Active Entries

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jan. 9th, 2026 04:19 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios