Re: How many dinosaur species survived the KT event?
- From: John Harshman <jharshman.diespamdie@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 07 Sep 2006 16:32:59 GMT
Walter Bushell wrote:
In article <1hlaheu.18w3ma4qjjgfcN%j.wilkins1@xxxxxxxxx>,Not necessarily true. Some groups are not clades, with membership
j.wilkins1@xxxxxxxxx (John Wilkins) wrote:
Walter Bushell <proto@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
In article <KdoLg.8238$yO7.5567@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>,
John Harshman <jharshman.diespamdie@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
UC wrote:
John Harshman wrote:
UC wrote:
Ken Denny wrote:
Are all birds descendants of a single dinosaur species that lived at
the time of the KT event?
Yes.
Or multiple species?
Yes, that too.
That makes no sense at all. The alternatives are mutually exclusive.
Did one species maybe
evolve into ostriches, emus, etc. another into penguins, and another
into all the other bird species?
Yes, three.
That makes even less sense.
Or was nonsense your goal?
Si.
So hard to tell, since most of what you say is nonsense, even when you
(apparently) aren't intending it.
Eukaryotes are the best prokaryotes.
ITYM eukaryotes are the best karyotes.
Eukaryotes make the best carryouts.
But I thought prokaryotes were all the life forms that weren't
eukaryotes.
according to
http://www.earthlife.net/cells.html
All living things are divided into two major groups depending on how
their cells are set up, these two groups are the Prokaryotes, and the
Eukaryotes.
Thus the eukaryotes must have descended from prokaryotes, hence
eukaryotes must be prokaryotes. It would be hard to explain how a
eukaryote could emerge, except from a simpler cell, which would have to
be a prokaryote.
criteria based on descent, but are classes, with membership criteria
based on possession of particular characters. And this is true for
prokaryotes. They're like the everyday definition of "fish", which means
more or less "vertebrates that live in the water and have gills and
fins". We are not prokaryotes because we don't possess the defining
characters of prokaryotes.
Now of course eukaryotes have several ancestors, some of which (the
ancestor of mitochondria, for example) were clearly prokaryotes. It's
not clear whether all of them were. At this point we get into the fact
that prokaryoteness (prokaryotude? prokaryotidity?) is defined on the
basis of several characters that might not have always gone together,
and some of which are not quite discrete. There are now two sizes of
ribosomes, but what would you call a cell with intermediate-sized
ribosomes? Where did nuclear membranes come from? Was it originally a
cell membrane of yet another eukaryote component?
So the cladistic idea of prokaryotes has two big problems. First, it
goes against the common definition. This is not a really big problem,
since words can always be redefined if we find them useful, as with
other groups that were formerly paraphyletic. However, if we redefine
"prokaryote" cladistically, it would appear to be a junior synonym for
"life". Second, the concept of cladistic definitions gets into trouble
if the group in question is massively reticulate, and even if we ignore
the various organelles, the eukaryote nucleus may have been assembled
from multiple sources.
.
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