Evolution
Evidence for Evolution
Multiple lines of evidence — fossils, anatomy, genetics, observation, biogeography
Evidence for evolution comes from many independent lines, all converging on common descent and natural selection. Major lines: (1) Fossils — show progression of forms over time. (2) Comparative anatomy — homologous structures from common ancestor. (3) Genetic similarity — DNA shows relatedness. (4) Direct observation — antibiotic resistance, finch beaks. (5) Biogeography — geographic distribution. (6) Vestigial structures — leftover features. (7) Embryology — similar early development. Each line independently supports evolution; together overwhelming. Theory established by 1860s; molecular evidence accumulated since 1960s.
- Lines of evidenceFossils, anatomy, genetics, observation, biogeography
- First fossil evidence19th century paleontology
- Genetic evidence1960s+ DNA sequencing
- Direct observationAntibiotic resistance; finch beaks (Grant studies)
- Vestigial structuresWhale hip bones, human appendix
- ConvergenceMultiple lines independently support theory
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Why evolution evidence matters
- Biology foundation. Underpins all biology.
- Medicine. Disease evolution; antibiotic resistance.
- Agriculture. Crop and livestock breeding.
- Public health. Predict disease emergence.
- Conservation. Understanding species needs.
- Drug discovery. Comparative biology.
- Education. Foundation of biological thinking.
Common misconceptions
- Evolution is "just a theory." Theory = well-supported explanation.
- Evolution always slow. Can be fast (years to centuries).
- Evidence is fossils only. Many lines of evidence.
- Humans evolved from monkeys. Common ancestor with apes.
- Evolution implies progress. No goal; adapted to circumstances.
- One species can become another quickly. Speciation usually slow.
Frequently asked questions
What's the fossil evidence?
Fossils show progression of forms over time. Older rocks: simpler forms. Younger: more complex, modern. Transitional fossils: link major groups (e.g., Tiktaalik — fish-tetrapod link, 375 Mya; Archaeopteryx — dinosaur-bird link, 150 Mya). Stratigraphy: deeper layers older. Plus: fossil assemblages match expected sequence for evolution. Tens of thousands of transitional fossils now known.
What's homology?
Similar structures in different species inherited from common ancestor. Examples: forelimbs of human, bat, whale, horse — same bones (humerus, radius, ulna, carpals, metacarpals, phalanges) in different proportions. Inherited from common tetrapod ancestor. Even though functions differ: same underlying structure. Strong evidence for common descent. Different from analogy (similar function, different origin — convergent evolution).
How does genetics support evolution?
Multiple ways. (1) DNA sequence similarity reflects relatedness — closer relatives have more similar sequences. (2) Universal genetic code — common ancestor used same code; passed to descendants. (3) Pseudogenes: broken genes shared with relatives indicate common origin. (4) Endogenous retroviruses: virus DNA in genomes of related species shows shared ancestry. (5) Molecular clock: rate of mutation can date splits.
What's biogeography?
Geographic distribution of species. Observed patterns suggest evolution + dispersal. Examples: marsupials in Australia (isolated continent, evolved different from placentals); Galápagos finches (each island has different species; common origin from mainland); flightless birds on isolated islands (lost flight when no predators — kakapo, kiwi). If all species created identical: distribution would not match.
What are vestigial structures?
Leftover features from ancestors with no current function. Examples: human appendix (reduced from larger; immune role minimal), whale pelvis (no legs), python pelvis (no legs), wisdom teeth (less needed), ostrich wings (don't fly). Indicate: ancestors had functional features; lost function, structure remained. Hard to explain except via descent.
How is evolution observed in real time?
Many examples. (1) Galápagos finches: Grants documented 30+ years of beak evolution in Daphne Major; drought selected for thicker beaks. (2) Antibiotic resistance: rapidly evolving in clinical settings. (3) Pesticide resistance: insects evolve quickly. (4) Industrial melanism: peppered moth color shift. (5) E. coli long-term experiment (Lenski): citrate-using mutants emerged; new metabolic capability evolved.
What about creationism?
Scientific consensus: evolution well-established. ~99% of biologists accept evolution. Multiple convergent lines of evidence. "Theory" in science: well-substantiated explanation supported by evidence. Specific objections (intelligent design, creationism) lack scientific support; not testable or contradicted by evidence. Evolution: fundamental to biology and medicine.