Joe G
Posts: 12011 Joined: July 2007
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Quote (Acartia_Bogart @ April 13 2018,08:50) | Quote (Joe G @ April 12 2018,20:01) | Quote (Henry J @ April 12 2018,19:40) | So "body plan" refers to the level of detail at the phylum level? That's not what I would have guessed. |
No. The body plan refers to down to the detail of each type.
Humans and chimps have different body plans- they are different types. |
Four limbs, no tail, a head, five fingers, five toes, ears, eyes, nose, mouth, large and small intestine, liver, appendix, radius, ulna, humerus, tibia, tibia, femur, same number of bones in hands and feet, clavicle, scapula, vertebrae, large brain, tongue, teeth, neck,...
Yup, completely different body plans. You should stick with Frequency = Wavelength. |
You are an ignorant ass, blowTARD:
Quote | 1. Relatively long legs compared with the trunk with the centre of gravity in the pelvis, just in front of the sacrum.
2. An S-shaped curved spine so that the head and trunk are balanced over the centre of gravity. This combined with the outward facing shoulder means the arms rest beside the trunk.
3. A wide curved pelvis providing large attachment sites for strong abductor and rotator muscles needed to raise the pelvis and swing the legs under it. A large hip joint with its mechanical axis in front of the line of gravity. This means that the most stable position for the hip is full extension, i.e. upright.
4. A large, forward facing knee joint, aligned under the hip joint with its mechanical axis behind the line of gravity. This means that the most stable position for the knee is also full extension, i.e. upright.
5. A plantigrade foot, i.e. heel and toes both on the ground, with a large heel, and the foot bones arranged in lengthways and side-to-side arches. This distributes the body weight evenly between the heel and toes and provides some elastic recoil when walking.
6. A large first toe (“big toe”) tightly bound to and aligned with the other toes, with the toes being short and straight. Apes have none of these essential features. Apes have short legs, a long trunk and long arms (longer than their legs) with their centre of gravity high in the trunk. This makes them top heavy and unstable without using their arms for support. Their spines lack any convex forward curves needed to balance the head and upper body over the centre of gravity. The head and arms tend to swing forward. Their knees and feet are turned outwards and their hip and knee joints are aligned so that they bend with gravity.
Although apes have a plantigrade foot, it is not arched, and the big toe is separate from the other toes, like a thumb. Their toes are long and curved.
There is no functional half-way combination of apes’ quadruped stance and human bipedal stance. The semi-stooped posture depicted in evolutionary drawings is hopelessly unstable and would require enormous expenditure of muscle energy to maintain it. Humans can stand upright with very little muscle contraction required because their bones are joints are arranged in a balanced way around a vertical line through their centre of gravity. |
http://askjohnmackay.com/man-ape....erences
You have to have a mechanism capable of producing those differences in body plan. And if it requires more than two specific mutations you don't have enough time.
-------------- "Facts are Stupid"- Timothy Horton aka Occam's Afterbirth
"Genetic mutations aren't mistakes"-ID and Timothy Horton
Whales do not have tails. Water turns to ice via a molecular code- Acartia bogart, TARD
YEC is more coherent than materialism and it's bastard child, evolutionism
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