Pinnipede ancestry Re: Wolf to Whale Transmutation CONFIRMED
I have added sci.bio.paleontology, because Darwin123's contribution is
solidly on-topic there.
Interesting case histories, if true. But these people have a long way
to go before they get good at the evidence.
You, too, "Darwin": why didn't you crosspost this to s.b.p.? We could
sure use more posts like this there.
*Pakicetus,* to be precise. *Ambulocetus* is another transitional
closer to the whales.
*Ambulocetus* is closer and probably *Rodhocetus* [sp.?] is closer
still. Modern whales probably diverged after R. and may even have
diverged after *Zygorhiza* [sp.?], an archaeocete similar to
*Basilosaurus* ["Zeuglodon"] but not too elongated to be a probable dolphin ancestor.
In fact, the evidence for what that LCM looked like is quite scanty,
and transitionals prior to it that are as lovely as Pakicetus for whales are unknown.
This idea of convergent evolution of pinnipedes was once popular but
seems to have fallen out of fashion. Perhaps John Harshman can fill
us in on this one.
In technical terms, you are suggesting that Pinnipedia is
polyphyletic, but the prevailing opinion is that it is monophyletic,
in the sense that the last common ancestor of both seals and sea lions
is believed to have the diagnostic characters of a pinnipede.
Huh? Didn't he say he had become an evolutionism believer?
Peter Nyikos
Professor, Dept. of Mathematics -- standard disclaimer--
University of South Carolina
http://www.math.sc.edu/~nyikos/
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