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- Dr. Heinz Lycklama
- heinz@osta.com
- www.osta.com
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- Amazing creatures
- Human eye
- Trilobite eye
- Sea slug
- Gardening ants
- Giraffe
- Symbiotic relationships
- Migratory feats
- Incredible insects
- Amazing fish
- Woodpecker, butterfly, bombardier beetle
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- Cheetah cat can run 70 mph
- Insects that can sleep for 17 years
- Weddell seals that can remain underwater for 45 minutes
- Dive to depths of 1500 feet
- Eight-armed, ink-shooting octopuses
- Eat their own arms and grow new ones
- Archerfish that can shoot water 15 feet into the air and hit a bug
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- Peregrine falcons that can swoop down on their prey at 150 mph
- Iron-eating bacteria that live 10,000 feet beneath the earth’s surface
- Endure pressures of 3,000 psi
- Endure scalding temperatures of 185 deg. F.
- Many highly complicated and intricate “adaptations” which completely
defy evolutionary explanation
- Ingenious design and purposiveness [Teleology]
- The incredible mysteries of the human body
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- Staggering complexity
- Can’t be explained by step-by-step
random mutation and selection
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- Automatic aiming, focusing, aperture adjustment
- Functions from almost complete darkness to bright sunlight
- Can see a fine hair
- Makes about 100,000 separate motions per day
- Provides us a continuous series of color stereoscopic pictures
- All performed without complaint
- Carries out its own maintenance while we sleep
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- So complex and sophisticated that scientists do not fully understand how
it functions
- Requires sophisticated synchronization of complex structures and
mechanisms
- The eye would be useless unless fully developed
- Piecemeal evolution of the human eye is a completely unreasonable notion
- Probability of chance formation is 1 in 10**266
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- “To suppose that the eye, with all its inimitable contrivances for
adjusting the focus to different distances, for admitting different
amounts of light, and for the correction of spherical and chromatic
aberration, could have been formed by natural selection , seems, I
freely confess, absurd in the highest possible degree. … The belief that
an organ as perfect as the eye could have formed by natural selection is
more than enough to stagger anyone.”
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- “My last doubt concerns
so-called parallel evolution. … Even something as complex as the eye has
appeared several times; for example, in the squid, the vertebrates, and
the arthropods. It’s bad enough accounting for the origin of such things
once, but the thought of producing them several times makes my head
swim.”
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- Trilobite now extinct
- Eyes composed of inorganic calcite
- Trilobite lenses preserved in fossil record
- Double lens design [human eye is single lens]
- 100 to 15,000 lenses in each eye
- Could see underwater without distortion
- Implicit knowledge of Abbe’s Sine Law, Fermat’s Principle, and other
principles of optics inherent in the design of these lenses
- Carefully designed by a knowledgeable physicist!
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- Lives along seacoast within tidal zone
- Feeds primarily on sea anemones
- Anemones are equipped with 1000’s of small stinging cells on their
tentacles
- Cells explode at slightest touch
- Plunge poisoned harpoons into “would-be” intruders
- Speared intruder is paralyzed and drawn into the anemone’s stomach to
be digested
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- Sea slug is not stung
- Undigested stinging cells are swept along through ciliated tubes that
are connected to the stomach and end in pouches
- Stinging cells are arranged and stored in the pouches to be used for sea
slug’s defense!
- Whenever attacked, sea slug defends itself using the stinging cells
- Defies evolutionary explanation!
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- Bull’s Horn Acacia tree of South America furnished with large hollow
thorns
- Inhabited by ferocious stinging ants
- Small bumps on tree supply food to ants
- Tree receives complete protection
from all animal predators and plant competitors
- Ants viciously attack all intruders
- Ants are gardeners and nip off any green shoot that shows its head near
their tree
- When all ants are removed from one of these trees, tree dies within 2 to
15 months
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- Ten ft. high at the shoulder
- Eight foot neck
- Seven neck bones
- Huge heart to deliver
blood to the brain
- Large lungs (8 * human)
- Slow air intake
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- Reinforced artery walls
- By-pass and anti-
pooling valves
- Web of small blood
vessels
- Pressure-sensing signals
- Engineered for survival
- Defies explanation by evolution!
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- Certain fish feed on smaller
fish and shrimp
- Their mouths become littered
with debris and parasites
- Larger fish pay visit to “cleaning station” and opens its mouth and gill
chambers
- Little “cleaner” fish and shrimp swim in and “do their job”
- “Win-win” for both parties
- Also practiced by Egyptian plover bird in cleaning out parasites from
Nile river crocodile
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- Defends against enemies by secreting a detergent substance from a gland
- Propels beetle forward
quickly out of
immediate danger
- Detergent causes the
surface tension of water
to break down
- Pursuing insect sinks
into the water
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- White-throated warbler
- Summers in Germany
- Winters in Africa
- Parent birds take off for Africa at end of Summer as young birds become
more independent
- Young birds take off a few weeks later, flying instinctively across
1000’s of miles of unfamiliar land and sea to rejoin their parents
- Brains of birds have inherited knowledge
- Can tell latitude, longitude and direction by the stars
- Have “calendar”, clock and navigational data
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- Born in Alaska
- 26 days of incubation
- After few months,
parents fly to Hawaii
- 4500 Km from Alaska to Hawaii
- Average weight of bird is 140 grams
- Put on 70 more grams of weight as fuel
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- Takes 88 hours to fly to Hawaii
- All over open water, without a break
- Takes 250,000 wing flaps
- Fly through fog, rain, sunshine, starlight, overcast skies
- Requires 0.6% of body weight per hour
- All fuel exhausted in 72 hours
- Flying in V-formation saves 22% of energy
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- Canadian Golden plover bird
- Travels 8000 miles south from
Hudson Bay
- Crosses 2000 miles of sea from
Nova Scotia to Caribbean countries
- Winters in Argentina
- Returns by way of Central America
and the Mississippi Valley
- Barn swallow
- Migrates 9000 miles from Northern Canada to Argentina
- Artic tern migrates 14000 miles, pole to pole and back
- Others – whales, fur seals, bats, salmon, turtles, etc.
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- Remarkable migratory abilities cannot evolve piecemeal through mere
chance
- Requires directing intelligence
- Migratory instincts are useless unless perfect
- Navigating perfectly across only half of an ocean does not help
- These animals were carefully created and designed with these instincts
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- Insects are the only invertebrates
able to fly
- Wing of an insect:
- Capable of very strong sculling action
- Capable of elevation, depression, fore
and aft movement, pronation and supination
- Capable of changes in shape by folding and buckling
- Many insects can hover, or fly backwards or sideways, or rotate about
the head or tail by using unequal wing movement
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- Some insects (e.g. bees, wasps,
flies) have small wing
area
- Honeybee needs small wing
for bee hive
- Very rapid wing beat rate of
200 per second
- Midge has wing beat rate
of 1046 per second
- Amazing engineering wonders!
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- Lives in waters near
Oahu, Hawaii
- Uses dorsal fin as a lure
- Goes up and appears to be a separate smaller fish, complete with
“mouth” and “eye”
- Ceases its gill movements
- Stops breathing
- Lure turns deep red color
- Part attaching lure to fish body becomes transparent
- Moves decoy side to side, remaining still
- Fish snaps up victim when within reach
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- A - uses “lure” at end of moveable “fishing pole” suspended over mouth
- B – has “fishing rod” coming out of its back with luminescent “bulb” at
end of it
- C – deep-sea angler has “light bulb” hanging from roof of its mouth
(dangling)
- D – simulates movement of real shrimp
- May move in quick backward-darting motion
- If “bait” gets nipped off, grows back “bait” within a few days, fully
replaced within two weeks
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- More features of God’s incredible creatures:
- Visual beauty – where from? why?
- Exhibited by fish deep in the sea
- Mimicry – how did it develop?
- One type of organism imitates/mimics another type
- e.g. spiders disguising as ants (8 legs vs. 6 legs)
- Angler fish
- Convergence (similar organs/structures)
- Sonar systems in bat and porpoise
- Wing mechanisms “evolved” separately in insects, bats,
flying reptiles, birds
- No evolutionary mechanism can explain this!
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- Woodpecker
- Metamorphosis of a Butterfly
- Bombardier Beetle
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