Your idea is silly and unscientific.
You really want to declare my quoting the scriptures as silly?
Your idea is silly and unscientific.
Yep. Remarkably fast.
Another is the mutation that prevents "shattering" (easy release of mature seeds) in wheat. When that one appeared, humans quickly selected for it, because it made one-time harvesting possible.
Take that up with 6days. He's got an answer for everything :chuckle:
Or you can cut out the middleman and see what the pseudo-scientists at AiG have to say (baby Dinos, God made all animals eat hay bc He's God, and so on.
Even if that happened exactly like that, I wonder how long God had to wait before turning the lions into carnivores again? If you do it right after they get off the ark, and there are only two of each kind, then killing any individual means that a whole species goes extinct
Not true of wheat or maize, which have spread far, far from their beginnings. Highly successful organisms.
Nope. The earliest wheat that shattered had smaller heads and less nutrition, not more.
Nope. A single mutation, not cross-breeding.
By humans.
Where you gettin' your info?
Domestication or modern genetics tampering?
Do you really think that wheat/corn/potatoes/crops in general produced MORE food than they did after people transformed them?
Wut?
Perhaps I misunderstood
Do you maybe have the article where archaeologists have said that?An early shattering head that the wind could carry would tend to make a bigger stand year after year.
When you figure that original einkorn wheat fell off in a clump and molded.
And emmer wheat drilled it's seed in the ground right next to itself.
Barb is holding that humans early domestic practices caused a mutation.
He's wrong.
Archeologists have tested early grain and found no such mutation and have concluded that the mutation has occurred in recent practices.
Do you maybe have the article where archaeologists have said that?
I know this: maize is the plant that modern corn crops come from. It looks nothing like corn. It has such tiny kernels that it looks like a wheat plant. It didn't naturally start out as a good source of food.
But humans cultivated it, and used intuition to discover that plants with a higher food yield should be bred with others that have high yields, and by doing so over long periods of time (relatively short in geological terms, however) they modified maize into corn
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0305440310001287
Abstract
The development of agriculture is closely associated with the domestication of wheat, one of the earliest crop species. During domestication key genes underlying traits important to Neolithic agriculture were targeted by selection. One gene believed to be such a domestication gene is NAM-B1, affecting both nutritional quality and yield but with opposite effects. A null mutation, first arisen in emmer wheat, decreases the nutritional quality but delays maturity and increases grain size; previously the ancestral allele was believed lost during the domestication of durum and bread wheat by indirect selection for larger grain. By genotyping 63 historical seed samples originating from the 1862 International Exhibition in London, we found that the ancestral allele was present in two spelt wheat and two bread wheat cultivars widely cultivated at the time. This suggests that fixation of the mutated allele of NAM-B1 in bread wheat, if at all, occurred during modern crop improvement rather than during domestication. We also discuss the value of using archaeological and historical plant material to further the understanding of the development of agriculture.
Evolutionists also have suggestions for how God's Word should be interpreted differently. Why not just trust Jesus that humanity was there from a time near the foundations of the world and the beginning of creation? Why not trust the context Moses used for "one day", suggesting that there was nothing pre-existing. Why not trust that God created the sun, moon and stars on the fourth day? Why not trust the science which supports the truth of God's Word?
By humans.
Where you gettin' your info?
I wonder about how dodo bird ended up on the island of Mauritius and nowhere else.
One theory I heard attributed to young earth creationists is that a volcano blew them there from the Middle East after the flood.
Barb is holding that humans early domestic practices caused a mutation.
Archeologists have tested early grain and found no such mutation and have concluded that the mutation now found in wheat has occurred in recent practices.
6days does like it.Greg Jennings said:And perhaps this is the funniest part about YEC: they reject evolution, but support extremely rapid speciation from a few basic kinds, which is (whether 6days likes it or not) evolution in action
6days does like it.
Selection eliminates (pre-existing) genetic variation in the gene pool. Speciation almost always pushes the new 'species' one step closer to ectinction. Highly adapted organisms (ie island and coral populations) often have lost so much genetic info that they are unable to survive environmental change.
Better estimate from scripture is a little less than 6,000 years. First Adam to Last Adam is about 4000 years.How long have humans been threshing?
Best estimate is around 9500 B.C.
Better estimate from scripture is a little less than 6,000 years. First Adam to Last Adam is about 4000 years.