Fruit bearing plants before dinosaurs?
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Fruit bearing plants before dinosaurs?
In the first chapter of genesis we see God creating fruit bearing plants before animals. Doesn't science tell us that they came way after the first animals?
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Re: Fruit bearing plants before dinosaurs?
Baltazorg wrote:In the first chapter of genesis we see God creating fruit bearing plants before animals. Doesn't science tell us that they came way after the first animals?
Genesis is topical not nesesarily cronological.
It is not a science book, it is the why not the how.
1Tim1:15-17
Here is a trustworthy saying that deserves full acceptance: Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners of whom I am the worst. But for that very reason I was shown mercy so that in me, the worst of sinners, Christ Jesus might display his immense patience as an example for those who would believe in him and receive eternal life. Now to the King eternal, immortal, invisible, the only God, be honor and glory for ever and ever.Amen.
Here is a trustworthy saying that deserves full acceptance: Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners of whom I am the worst. But for that very reason I was shown mercy so that in me, the worst of sinners, Christ Jesus might display his immense patience as an example for those who would believe in him and receive eternal life. Now to the King eternal, immortal, invisible, the only God, be honor and glory for ever and ever.Amen.
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Re: Fruit bearing plants before dinosaurs?
"Science" is a technique for trying to find out truth and can't tell us anything. Some scientists may have come to the conclusion that fruit bearing plants came after animals but there is no way to test their beliefs to find out if they are true. Here is something I said about this subject on another thread:Baltazorg wrote:Doesn't science tell us that they came way after the first animals?
Here is something else that relates to this subject:When comparing the Bible's account of creation with scientific theories here is one thing we must take into account.
And even if our gospel is veiled, it is veiled to those who are perishing. In their case the god of this world has blinded the minds of the unbelievers, to keep them from seeing the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ, who is the image of God.
(2 Corinthians 4:3-4 ESV)
If Satan can blind the minds of unbelievers to keep them from seeing the way of salvation isn't it also possible for him to blind the minds of scientists to keep them from seeing evidence that supports the Bible's account of creation?
http://clydeherrin.wordpress.com/2013/01/10/age-2/
Last edited by theophilus on Sun Aug 18, 2013 2:06 pm, edited 1 time in total.
God wants full custody of his children, not just visits on Sunday.
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Re: Fruit bearing plants before dinosaurs?
Theophilus,theophilus wrote:"Science" is a technique for trying to find out truth and can't tell us anything. Some scientists may have come to the conclusion that fruit bearing plants came after animals but there is no way to test their beliefs to find out if they are true. Here is something I said about this subject on another thread:Baltazorg wrote:Doesn't science tell us that they came way after the first animals?
Here is something else that relates to this subject:When comparing the Bible's account of creation with scientific theories here is one thing we must take into account.
And even if our gospel is veiled, it is veiled to those who are perishing. In their case the god of this world has blinded the minds of the unbelievers, to keep them from seeing the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ, who is the image of God.
(2 Corinthians 4:3-4 ESV)
If God can blind the minds of unbelievers to keep them from seeing the way of salvation isn't it also possible for him to blind the minds of scientists to keep them from seeing evidence that supports the Bible's account of creation?
http://clydeherrin.wordpress.com/2013/01/10/age-2/
I already responded to your quote on another post, but when you posted this, didn't it seem out of God's character to you, when you said God blinds the minds of unbelievers? You really think God wants to keep people from salvation? You completely butchered 2 Corinthians 4:3-4. The god of this world, spoken about in that passage, is Satan, not God.
John 5:24
24 “Truly, truly, I say to you, he who hears My word, and believes Him who sent Me, has eternal life, and does not come into judgment, but has passed out of death into life.
“A nation of sheep will beget a government of wolves.”
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St. Richard the Sarcastic--The Patron Saint of Irony
24 “Truly, truly, I say to you, he who hears My word, and believes Him who sent Me, has eternal life, and does not come into judgment, but has passed out of death into life.
“A nation of sheep will beget a government of wolves.”
-Edward R Murrow
St. Richard the Sarcastic--The Patron Saint of Irony
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Re: Fruit bearing plants before dinosaurs?
That is what I intended to say.RickD wrote:The god of this world, spoken about in that passage, is Satan, not God.
God wants full custody of his children, not just visits on Sunday.
Re: Fruit bearing plants before dinosaurs?
I was taught plants before animals.Baltazorg wrote:In the first chapter of genesis we see God creating fruit bearing plants before animals. Doesn't science tell us that they came way after the first animals?
Latest thought is that dinosaurs were in fact flightless birds rather than reptiles.
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Re: Fruit bearing plants before dinosaurs?
The accurate thing to say would be that modern birds descended from dinosaurs.
It would be a blessing if they missed the cairns and got lost on the way back. Or if
the Thing on the ice got them tonight.
I could only turn and stare in horror at the chief surgeon.
Death by starvation is a terrible thing, Goodsir, continued Stanley.
And with that we went below to the flame-flickering Darkness of the lower deck
and to a cold almost the equal of the Dante-esque Ninth Circle Arctic Night
without.
//johnadavid.wordpress.com
the Thing on the ice got them tonight.
I could only turn and stare in horror at the chief surgeon.
Death by starvation is a terrible thing, Goodsir, continued Stanley.
And with that we went below to the flame-flickering Darkness of the lower deck
and to a cold almost the equal of the Dante-esque Ninth Circle Arctic Night
without.
//johnadavid.wordpress.com
Re: Fruit bearing plants before dinosaurs?
Can you enlighten with one example or any modern bird and the dinosaur it descended from?neo-x wrote:The accurate thing to say would be that modern birds descended from dinosaurs.
And for accuracy's same, point to fossils that show this.
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Re: Fruit bearing plants before dinosaurs?
Modern bird: Turdus merula
Ancestral dinosaur: Deinonychus antirrhopus
Connection: Google 'dinosaur bird evolution' and choose an image at whatever level of analysis you understand best.
Ancestral dinosaur: Deinonychus antirrhopus
Connection: Google 'dinosaur bird evolution' and choose an image at whatever level of analysis you understand best.
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Re: Fruit bearing plants before dinosaurs?
Hugh, thankyou for chiming in.hughfarey wrote:Modern bird: Turdus merula
Ancestral dinosaur: Deinonychus antirrhopus
Connection: Google 'dinosaur bird evolution' and choose an image at whatever level of analysis you understand best.
It would be a blessing if they missed the cairns and got lost on the way back. Or if
the Thing on the ice got them tonight.
I could only turn and stare in horror at the chief surgeon.
Death by starvation is a terrible thing, Goodsir, continued Stanley.
And with that we went below to the flame-flickering Darkness of the lower deck
and to a cold almost the equal of the Dante-esque Ninth Circle Arctic Night
without.
//johnadavid.wordpress.com
the Thing on the ice got them tonight.
I could only turn and stare in horror at the chief surgeon.
Death by starvation is a terrible thing, Goodsir, continued Stanley.
And with that we went below to the flame-flickering Darkness of the lower deck
and to a cold almost the equal of the Dante-esque Ninth Circle Arctic Night
without.
//johnadavid.wordpress.com
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Re: Fruit bearing plants before dinosaurs?
this is a general overview, you can find more specific instances online as hugh suggested.BritGuy wrote:Can you enlighten with one example or any modern bird and the dinosaur it descended from?neo-x wrote:The accurate thing to say would be that modern birds descended from dinosaurs.
And for accuracy's same, point to fossils that show this.
It would be a blessing if they missed the cairns and got lost on the way back. Or if
the Thing on the ice got them tonight.
I could only turn and stare in horror at the chief surgeon.
Death by starvation is a terrible thing, Goodsir, continued Stanley.
And with that we went below to the flame-flickering Darkness of the lower deck
and to a cold almost the equal of the Dante-esque Ninth Circle Arctic Night
without.
//johnadavid.wordpress.com
the Thing on the ice got them tonight.
I could only turn and stare in horror at the chief surgeon.
Death by starvation is a terrible thing, Goodsir, continued Stanley.
And with that we went below to the flame-flickering Darkness of the lower deck
and to a cold almost the equal of the Dante-esque Ninth Circle Arctic Night
without.
//johnadavid.wordpress.com
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Re: Fruit bearing plants before dinosaurs?
Or, those creature could have been created as they were with no macro-evolution involved.neo-x wrote:this is a general overview, you can find more specific instances online as hugh suggested.BritGuy wrote:Can you enlighten with one example or any modern bird and the dinosaur it descended from?neo-x wrote:The accurate thing to say would be that modern birds descended from dinosaurs.
And for accuracy's same, point to fossils that show this.
John 5:24
24 “Truly, truly, I say to you, he who hears My word, and believes Him who sent Me, has eternal life, and does not come into judgment, but has passed out of death into life.
“A nation of sheep will beget a government of wolves.”
-Edward R Murrow
St. Richard the Sarcastic--The Patron Saint of Irony
24 “Truly, truly, I say to you, he who hears My word, and believes Him who sent Me, has eternal life, and does not come into judgment, but has passed out of death into life.
“A nation of sheep will beget a government of wolves.”
-Edward R Murrow
St. Richard the Sarcastic--The Patron Saint of Irony
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Re: Fruit bearing plants before dinosaurs?
According to Genesis, chronologically, The sun and the moon and the stars were made AFTER the Earth was, so...
Re: Fruit bearing plants before dinosaurs?
I'll take that as "no", but it's what you want to believe anyway.neo-x wrote:this is a general overview, you can find more specific instances online as hugh suggested.BritGuy wrote:Can you enlighten with one example or any modern bird and the dinosaur it descended from?neo-x wrote:The accurate thing to say would be that modern birds descended from dinosaurs.
And for accuracy's same, point to fossils that show this.
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Re: Fruit bearing plants before dinosaurs?
http://www.scientificamerican.com/artic ... nt-evolved
Earth is the planet of the plants—and it all can be traced back to one green cell. The world's lush profusion of photosynthesizers—from towering redwoods to ubiquitous diatoms—owe their existence to a tiny alga eons ago that swallowed a cyanobacteria and turned it into an internal solar power plant.
By studying the genetics of a glaucophyte—one of a group of just 13 unique microscopic freshwater blue-green algae, sometimes called "living fossils"—an international consortium of scientists led by molecular bioscientist Dana Price of Rutgers University, has elucidated the evolutionary history of plants. The glaucophyte Cyanophora paradoxa still retains a less domesticated version of this original cyanobacteria than most other plants.
According to the analysis of C. paradoxa's genome of roughly 70 million base pairs, this capture must have occurred only once because most modern plants share the genes that make the merger of photosynthesizer and larger host cell possible. That union required cooperation not just from the original host and the formerly free-ranging photosynthesizer but also, apparently, from a bacterial parasite. Chlamydia-like cells, such as Legionella (which includes the species that causes Legionnaire's disease), provided the genes that enable the ferrying of food from domesticated cyanobacteria, now known as plastids, or chloroplasts, to the host cell.
"These three entities forged the nascent organelle, and the process was aided by multiple horizontal gene transfers as well from other bacteria," explains biologist Debashish Bhattacharya of Rutgers University, whose lab led the work published in Science on February 17. "Gene recruitment [was] likely ongoing" before the new way of life prospered and the hardened cell walls of most plants came into being.
In fact, such a confluence of events is so rare that evolutionary biologists have found only one other example: the photosynthetic amoeba Paulinella domesticated cyanobacteria roughly 60 million years ago. "The amoeba plastid is still a 'work in progress' in evolutionary terms," Bhattacharya notes. "We are now analyzing the genome sequence from Paulinella to gain some answers" as to how these events occur.
The work provides the strongest support yet for the hypothesis of late biologist Lynn Margulis, who first proposed in the 1960s to widespread criticism the theory that all modern plant cells derived from such a symbiotic union, notes biologist Frederick Spiegel of the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville, who was not involved in the work. That thinking suggests that all plants are actually chimeras—hybrid creatures cobbled together from the genetic bits of this ancestral union, including the enabling parasitic bacteria.
The remaining question is why this complex union took place roughly 1.6 billion years ago. One suggestion is that local conditions may have made it more beneficial for predators of cyanobacteria to stop eating and start absorbing, due to a scarcity of prey and an abundance of sunlight. "When the food runs out but sunlight is abundant, then photosynthesis works better" to support an organism, Bhattacharya notes. And from that forced union a supergroup of extremely successful organisms—the plants—sprang.
Earth is the planet of the plants—and it all can be traced back to one green cell. The world's lush profusion of photosynthesizers—from towering redwoods to ubiquitous diatoms—owe their existence to a tiny alga eons ago that swallowed a cyanobacteria and turned it into an internal solar power plant.
By studying the genetics of a glaucophyte—one of a group of just 13 unique microscopic freshwater blue-green algae, sometimes called "living fossils"—an international consortium of scientists led by molecular bioscientist Dana Price of Rutgers University, has elucidated the evolutionary history of plants. The glaucophyte Cyanophora paradoxa still retains a less domesticated version of this original cyanobacteria than most other plants.
According to the analysis of C. paradoxa's genome of roughly 70 million base pairs, this capture must have occurred only once because most modern plants share the genes that make the merger of photosynthesizer and larger host cell possible. That union required cooperation not just from the original host and the formerly free-ranging photosynthesizer but also, apparently, from a bacterial parasite. Chlamydia-like cells, such as Legionella (which includes the species that causes Legionnaire's disease), provided the genes that enable the ferrying of food from domesticated cyanobacteria, now known as plastids, or chloroplasts, to the host cell.
"These three entities forged the nascent organelle, and the process was aided by multiple horizontal gene transfers as well from other bacteria," explains biologist Debashish Bhattacharya of Rutgers University, whose lab led the work published in Science on February 17. "Gene recruitment [was] likely ongoing" before the new way of life prospered and the hardened cell walls of most plants came into being.
In fact, such a confluence of events is so rare that evolutionary biologists have found only one other example: the photosynthetic amoeba Paulinella domesticated cyanobacteria roughly 60 million years ago. "The amoeba plastid is still a 'work in progress' in evolutionary terms," Bhattacharya notes. "We are now analyzing the genome sequence from Paulinella to gain some answers" as to how these events occur.
The work provides the strongest support yet for the hypothesis of late biologist Lynn Margulis, who first proposed in the 1960s to widespread criticism the theory that all modern plant cells derived from such a symbiotic union, notes biologist Frederick Spiegel of the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville, who was not involved in the work. That thinking suggests that all plants are actually chimeras—hybrid creatures cobbled together from the genetic bits of this ancestral union, including the enabling parasitic bacteria.
The remaining question is why this complex union took place roughly 1.6 billion years ago. One suggestion is that local conditions may have made it more beneficial for predators of cyanobacteria to stop eating and start absorbing, due to a scarcity of prey and an abundance of sunlight. "When the food runs out but sunlight is abundant, then photosynthesis works better" to support an organism, Bhattacharya notes. And from that forced union a supergroup of extremely successful organisms—the plants—sprang.