Darwin and his followers found support for evolution in the study of embryology, the science that investigates the development of organisms from fertilized egg to time of birth or hatching. Vertebrates, from fishes through lizards to humans, develop in ways that are remarkably similar during early stages, but they become more and more differentiated as the embryos approach maturity. The similarities persist longer between organisms that are more closely related (e.g., humans and monkeys) than between those less closely related (humans and sharks). Common developmental patterns reflect evolutionary kinship. Lizards and humans share a developmental pattern inherited from their remote common ancestor; the inherited pattern of each was modified only as the separate descendant lineages evolved in different directions. The common embryonic stages of the two creatures reflect the constraints imposed by this common inheritance, which prevents changes that have not been necessitated by their diverging environments and ways of life.
The embryos of humans and other nonaquatic vertebrates exhibit gill slits even though they never breathe through gills. These slits are found in the embryos of all vertebrates because they share as common ancestors the fish in which these structures first evolved. Human embryos also exhibit by the fourth week of development a well-defined tail, which reaches maximum length at six weeks. Similar embryonic tails are found in other mammals, such as dogs, horses, and monkeys; in humans, however, the tail eventually shortens, persisting only as a rudiment in the adult coccyx.
A close evolutionary relationship between organisms that appear drastically different as adults can sometimes be recognized by their embryonic homologies. Barnacles, for example, are sedentary crustaceans with little apparent likeness to such free-swimming crustaceans as lobsters, shrimps, or copepods. Yet barnacles pass through a free-swimming larval stage, the nauplius, which is unmistakably similar to that of other crustacean larvae.
Embryonic rudiments that never fully develop, such as the gill slits in humans, are common in all sorts of animals. Some, however, like the tail rudiment in humans, persist as adult vestiges, reflecting evolutionary ancestry. The most familiar rudimentary organ in humans is the vermiform appendix. This wormlike structure attaches to a short section of intestine called the cecum, which is located at the point where the large and small intestines join. The human vermiform appendix is a functionless vestige of a fully developed organ present in other mammals, such as the rabbit and other herbivores, where a large cecum and appendix store vegetable cellulose to enable its digestion with the help of bacteria. Vestiges are instances of imperfections—like the imperfections seen in anatomical structures—that argue against creation by design but are fully understandable as a result of evolution.
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Five-hominins-members-of-the-human-lineage-after-it-separatedFive hominins—members of the human lineage after it separated at least seven million to six …[Credits : Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.]
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Charles-Darwin-oil-over-a-photograph-1855Charles Darwin, oil over a photograph, c. 1855.[Credits : The Granger Collection, New York]
Title-page-of-the-1859-edition-of-Charles-Darwins-OnTitle page of the 1859 edition of Charles Darwin’s On the Origin of Species by …[Credits : Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.]
Alfred-Russel-Wallace-detail-of-a-painting-over-a-photographAlfred Russel Wallace, detail of a painting over a photograph; in the National Portrait Gallery, …[Credits : Courtesy of the National Portrait Gallery, London]
August-Weismann-German-biologist-and-one-of-the-founders-ofAugust Weismann, German biologist and one of the founders of the science of genetics.[Credits : The Bettmann Archive]
The central role of natural selection in biological evolution.[Credits : Copyright © 2004 AIMS Multimedia (www.aimsmultimedia.com)]
The 14 species of Galapagos finches differ from each other mainly in beak structure and feeding …[Credits : Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.]
Learn about the geological opinions regarding the formation of the "sacred uluru."[Credits : Acquired from Vast Video]
Learn about the creation theory of the Uluru espoused by some geologists.[Credits : Acquired from Vast Video]
Bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus).[Credits : Copyright © 2004 AIMS Multimedia (www.aimsmultimedia.com)]
Learn how early sea creatures adapted when water began receding from the Grand Canyon.[Credits : Acquired from Vast Video]
The Kaibab Sea’s withdrawal from the Grand Canyon marked the end of the Paleozoic Era.[Credits : Acquired from Vast Video]
The rise of oxygen in Earth’s atmosphere. Hundreds of millions of years ago, primitive life-forms …[Credits : Acquired from Vast Video]
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