Let us begin with a definition of biological evolution (the term can be
applied to other areas of change). It is the change in populations
of organisms through time.
First of all, trying to prove evolution is not something
scientists spend time thinking about or doing. That was accomplished
in 1859 when Darwin published his book “Origin of Species” and nothing has
been presented since then to cast any doubt. Having said that, the
process of evolution is extremely interesting and absorbs a lot of scientific
time and effort. And, having said that, I have spent almost my entire
life immersed in science and associating with scientists, some devoutly religious
and some profoundly areligious and most falling somewhere in between but
in no case can I recall meeting a scientist that was against individuals practicing
a religion of their choice. In short, acknowledging that being an evolutionist
does not mean a person must be an atheist or agnostic.
Can you think of one thing in this universe that does
not change? Even the most durable materials are affected by bombardment
of high energy particles. Why should we think that life, the most dynamic
aspect of earth be exempt?
The same process of science that brought us a sun centered
solar system, a spherical earth, atomic theory and miracle cures is the process
that brought us the theory of evolution. All of these help us to explain
our universe and to make predictions. Are they true? Only time
will tell.
Science can change with the presentation of new evidence and ideas with
better explanatory powers. At one time, heredity was thought to be
the result of “pangenes” present in the blood. With Mendel’s mathematical
approach to inheritance, the pangenes didn’t “pan” out. Chromosomes
seemed to follow Mendel’s mathematical explanation so they were thought
to be the source of inheritance. Chromosomes were analyzed and found
to be made up of proteins and nucleic acids. Which one would be the
better “code” for inheritance? Obviously proteins (a linear code with
up to 20 different amino acids could code for a heck of a lot of things).
Nucleotides come in only four varieties and could obviously code for far
fewer things. In 1953, the structure of DNA was solved and its code
deciphered. James Watson and Francis Crick determined the structure
of the deoxyribonucleic acid molecule and broke the three nucleotide code
that serves to assemble proteins from amino acids. Who today doubts
that nucleic acids are the key to inheritance? And, yet, who has even
seen a nucleotide?
Science is a process and if new evidence is presented
that contradicts then we must re-think our conclusions. All of us in
science have our cherished beliefs (gravity pulls toward the center of the
earth, DNA is the hereditary material, the earth is very old, current life
on earth evolved from pre-existing life, etc.). However, we can all
envision a scenario that if evidence proved to be true, we would have to
give up our cherished beliefs). That is to say, science is tentative!
Joseph McInerney said that science is not a democratic
domain, and its principles are not subject to vote. Raise you hands
if you want gold to have an atomic weight of 16!
There are two questions to be asked about the history
of life on earth:
1. What happened?
2. How did it happen?
“What happened?”
This is the easy question and its solution is no different
than assembling a jigsaw puzzle. Fossils. Fossils are the evidence
or remains of past life. Oklahoma is known throughout the world for
its fossils. People come from far and wide to study our fossils and
our stratigraphy.
Fossils clearly tell us that life has been on earth
for a very long time and that the forms of life have changed. The earliest
fossils are of pretty simple life forms. Cellular complexity and organismic
complexity came much later. Once complexity reached the organ/system
level over a half-billion years ago, complexity seemed to have run into
a “barrier.” That is, complexity has stalled out and the most complex
organisms of today aren’t any more complex than those of the Paleozoic Era.
Different, but not more complex. Also, many less complex (simple)
forms of life are still with us and evolving right along with the complex
life forms. In fact, it can be argued that the simple forms of life
have always dominated earth and always will. What I am trying to say
is that the fossil record does not show a linear process always going toward
more and more complexity or “perfection.” It shows a rather chaotic
maelstrom of change in one direction, followed by extinctions, succeeded
by great expansion of another form of life only to be replaced by something
else that gets its “fifteen minutes of fame.” Understanding the fossils
and trying to put this part of the puzzle together falls under the realm
of paleontology.
Stratigraphy on the other hand is the science of making
sense of the order of events. This is based on the continuous process
of erosion and deposition that constantly remodels the earth’s surface.
The layers created by deposition are called strata and “reading” the strata
is about like scattering the numbered pages of a book along a stretch of
road. It makes reading the book more difficult but as long as the pages
are there and numbered, it can still be done.
“How did it happen?”
This is the hard question to answer and the one that
scientists have been debating since Darwin’s time. Charles Darwin
did not invent the concept of evolution. The idea had been around
for some time before he was even born. In fact, when he embarked on
his famous voyage he was a creationist with a university degree in theology,
prepared to be a minister in the Church of England. What he observed
on the voyage eventually brought him to conclude that organisms indeed do
evolve from pre-existing organisms. What he called “descent with modification.”
Eventually he came to the decision (as did others) that the mechanism for
that change was natural selection and natural selection was based
on these three premises:
1. Overproduction – the reproductive potential
of all organisms can potentially outstrip their food, space or other resources.
2. Individual Variation – many traits within
populations are variable. This has been known for many years and demonstrated
with crude measurements but has really come to the forefront recently with
DNA “fingerprinting.”
3. Differential Reproductive Success – Individuals
with favorable combinations of genes (i.e. traits) will contribute more
to succeeding generations. Conversely, individuals with unfavorable
combinations of genes (i.e. traits) will contribute less to succeeding generations.
Mathematically this will result in a shift in gene combinations that are
most adaptive to the environment in which the organism exists. If the
environment changes then natural selection will act on the population to shift
the genetic make-up. Or, if the gene pool isn’t adequate to make the
shift, then the population may be unable to adapt and face extinction.
That is natural selection in a nutshell. It is difficult to imagine
any
argument against any of those three premises. It seems to be a major
driving force in the process of evolution. How important is it?
That is difficult to say and certainly brings a great deal of debate among
scientists.
What other evolutionary forces are at work? Well,
sexual selection is another factor at least among some sexually reproducing
organisms. Males and females may be able to behaviorally or physiologically
select what individuals with which they wish to exchange gametes. Sometimes
the more outlandish the opposite sex, the more attractive. Thus we
end up with garish colors, overwhelming antlers or bazaar behavioral antics.
There are many other processes that have been identified such as: the
founder principle, the bottleneck effect, stabilizing selection, disruptive
selection, polyploidy, non-disjunction, etc. etc. However, even all
these together can’t explain all of evolution. There is still a lot
to learn and in a hundred years the theory of evolution may look a lot different
than it does now. However, nothing will change the fact of evolution
as demonstrated by the fossil record. What will change is our understanding
of the pattern of evolution through the discovery of new fossils and the process
of evolution through observation, experimentation and dialogue.
This article was published in: Crosstimbers:
A Multicultural, Interdisciplinary Journal, Spring/Summer 2005 (Chickasha:
University of Science and Arts of Oklahoma. 2005), 23-25.
"Sue" -- greeting visitors
"Sue" -- another view
180
million year-old ammonites I purchased in 1972 in Switzerland
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