For the invisible things of him from the creation of the world are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even his eternal power and Godhead; so that they are without excuse: Romans 1:20
But when the reader looks for said evolution, there is none to be found
except a tale indeed.
Alan Channing [Cardiff U] found a fossilized
horsetail that must have been preserved in a hot spring environment. It
looks modern: “Though a new species, the fossilised plant is quite similar to some horsetails living today
with a single upright evergreen shaft,” the article confessed. While
admitted that horsetails have had a “contested evolutionary history”
that Channing’s work now “clears up,” the article went on to say that
“The findings suggest horsetails experienced only modest innovations in their long evolutionary history.”
Q: Innovations?
The article presented no evidence of ancestors of
horsetails. Worse, Channing’s study pushes the origin of modern-looking
horsetails back another 14 million years, to 150 million years before
the present. The fossil preserved “not only stems but also leaf sheaths, roots and reproductive structures.”
It’s as if this plant popped into existence 150 million years ago and
never dreamt up any new innovations all the way to the present except,
if anything, the older ones were bigger and better: “Today’s horsetail
plants are living fossils, the only surviving members of the class Equisetopsida, the article ended. “For more than a 100 million years, Equisetopsida plants dominated the understory of the late Mesozoic period forests, stretching up to 30 metres high.”" CEH