Daedalean's_Sun
New member
Of course it does. You cannot simply push back dates and change ideas and expect the theory to remain as strong as it was.
You are mistaken. Evolution isn't a monolithic "All or None" explanation, it doesn't claim to be infallible or even complete, and the actual dates and order that one class or genus diverges from another, has no bearing on whether the diversity of life is due to accumulated biological variation over time. That Neornithes arose 65 million years ago as opposed to 55 million years ago, does nothing to cast any doubt that Evolution is the best scientific explanation for the diversity of life we see today. Evolution like all scientific explanations is tentative and open to re-evaluation based on new evidence. It's a self-correcting process, that becomes more accurate with time.