19 MAY 2011 by ideonexus
The Evolution of Whales from Land to Sea
Whales were long an enigma, but recently our knowledge of whale evolution has become
rather rich. Molecular genetic evidence (see Chapter 10 for the nature of this kind of evidence)
shows that the closest living cousins of whales are hippos, then pigs, then ruminants. Even more
surprisingly, the molecular evidence shows that hippos are more closely related to whales than they
are to the cloven-hoofed animals (such as pigs and ruminants) which look much more like them.
This is another example ...The opposite of sea animals evolving to live on land.
19 MAY 2011 by ideonexus
Species Divisions are Complicated
Zoologists have traditionally divided the vertebrates into classes: major divisions with
names like mammals, birds, reptiles and amphibians. Some zoologists, called 'cladists',* insist that a
proper class must consist of animals all of whom share a common ancestor which belonged to that
class and which has no descendants outside that group. The birds would be an example of a good
class. All birds are descended from a single ancestor that would also have been called a bird and
would have sha...The ancestors are birds are reptiles, but in the fossil record where do we draw the line between them?