[Originally published in 2013 as The Great Debate, Take 2]
Last night, I again debated Dr. Robert A. Martin, a vertebrate paleontologist who is professor emeritus at Murray State University. The previous debate was on the broad subject of creation versus evolution. This time, the event organizers wanted us to narrow our discussion, so we chose to talk about dinosaurs and people.
Before I discuss the debate, I want to thank Dr. Martin for participating in it. I personally think the best way to understand an issue is to hear from multiple sides, so I think debates can be extremely helpful to those interested in controversial topics. However, it is difficult to get evolutionists to participate in debates about the creation/evolution controversy. I thank Dr. Martin for being committed to education strongly enough to be an exception to that general rule!
Since Dr. Martin had the weaker position scientifically, I allowed him to choose whether to present his case first or second. He chose to go second, so I was up first.
The initial activities (songs, introductions, and remarks from the organizers) made it clear that for some reason, the audience this year was overwhelmingly creationist. The previous year, creationists were in the majority, but there were many evolutionists present. That didn’t seem to be the case this year, so I started by thanking Dr. Martin for being willing to act as a lion in a den of Daniels.
In making my case, I concentrated on the evidence that indicates dinosaur fossils are not millions of years old. I stressed the soft tissue that is being found in fossils that are supposed to be millions of years old. I also discussed the fact that several dinosaur bones from different locations around the world all have enough carbon-14 in them to indicate that their maximum age is less than 40,000 years old. I also discussed how living organisms like the coelacanth, Wollemi pine, and tuatara falsify the geological-column thinking that leads most scientists to conclude that humans and dinosaurs didn’t live at the same time.
I then moved on to human evolution, discussing the wealth of data that indicate humans did not evolve from an ape-like ancestor. I discussed how genetics and morphology (the study of the form and structure of organisms) disagree on our most recent common ancestor, how the similarity between chimpanzee and human DNA is far too low to allow for evolution, and how different data give completely different evolutionary histories when it comes to human evolution and evolution in general.
I also discussed the problems that exist with two of the main candidates for intermediate links between an apelike ancestor and people (see here and here). I also discussed the wide gap in fossils between the incredibly apelike fossils that supposedly represent our ancient ancestors and the incredibly humanlike fossils that supposedly represent early forms of people.
I then ended with my favorite quote about all the supposed ancestors that are said to be a part of the human evolution story. It comes from Dr. Esteban E. Sarmiento writing in the journal Science:
…it is curious that in a century-old race for superlative hominid fossils on a continent currently populated with African apes, we consistently unearth nearly complete hominid ancestors and have yet to recognize even a small fragment of a bona fide chimpanzee or gorilla ancestor.
Dr. Martin’s presentation didn’t include a lot of evidence.
It mostly included declarative statements like, “We know how old these rocks are. Their ages aren’t in dispute” and “Here’s what paleontologists currently think” (not direct quotes). He gave the generally accepted view that dinosaurs went extinct (probably by a meteor impact) about 65 million years ago, and the first apelike direct ancestor of humans probably existed 6–7 million years ago. Thus, dinosaurs and people did not live at the same time.
He showed several of the supposed evolutionary ancestors of humans, giving a picture of the skull associated with the ancestor and then what he admitted was a “fanciful reconstruction.” Unfortunately, he didn’t really discuss what features of the skulls make paleontologists think these creatures are related to people. Most of his presentation had the message, “Scientists have been working on this for a long time; you should trust us” (once again, not a direct quote).
He did present evidence for one of the apelike ancestors (Australopithecus afarensis) having the ability to walk upright. It was the famous Laetoli footprints. He said that since they are dated at the same time as Australopithecus afarensis fossils, the footprints must be from them. Since the footprints look essentially like human footprints and show a human gait, they demonstrate that Australopithecus afarensis walked essentially like modern humans.
He did make a couple of rather silly statements.
In defending the traditional ages of rocks, he showed a picture of the Mars rover and said something like, “We can put a rover on Mars. Surely, we can date a rock. How hard can it be?” He also showed a common meme captioned, “Creationism: Because it’s a lot easier to read one book than a bunch of hard ones.” He also claimed that there was no scientific material in the Bible.
In my rebuttal, I pointed out that we can put a rover on Mars, but we can’t cure the common cold. Dating rocks is, in fact, very hard. If it were easy, there wouldn’t be discordant dates or rocks on earth that date older than the supposed age of the planet itself. I told him that in my experience, creationists read a lot more books than evolutionists.
The average creationist with whom I talk is much better informed on evolution than the average evolutionist is on creation. This is generally because informed creationists read both sides seriously, while most informed evolutionists read only one side seriously. I then listed some of the many examples of scientific content in the Bible.
I also discussed the Laetoli footprints, including the quote in the link above that says if it weren’t for their date, they would be interpreted as human footprints because they are essentially identical to the footprints a modern human would make. I pointed out that the only foot bone we have for Australopithecus afarensis is a single metatarsal, so we have no idea whether or not it could have made those footprints.
There is a more complete foot fossil that is dated at the same time as Australopithecus afarensis, but since it couldn’t have made the Laetoli footprints, it is thought to belong to some creature different from Australopithecus afarensis. Thus, it seems the footprints are being forced to belong to Australopithecus afarensis, regardless of their appearance or what else is found from that supposed time period.
In his rebuttal, Dr. Martin said that in listening to my presentation and rebuttal, it seemed to him that I had formed my opinion on origins and was forcing the data to fit that view.
He said that soft tissue in dinosaur bones was not evidence they are young, but he couldn’t say what it is. He suggested perhaps contamination or some unknown process that could keep tissue soft for millions of years. He said that the carbon-14 in dinosaur bones was not from the dinosaurs. It must be contamination.
He said that while individual paleontologists might disagree about individual human ancestors (like the ones I brought up), the overwhelming number of fossils and their correlation in time show that humans evolved from an apelike ancestor. He also said that you wouldn’t always expect genetics to agree with morphology because nature does strange things.
There was a question/answer session afterward, which had some good questions. It also had some really bad ones.
In addition, despite being told to be succinct several times, many questioners seemed more inclined to preach than to ask a question. Most of the questions were hostile to Dr. Martin’s position. Only one was hostile to mine, and it was the question about how we see distant starlight on a young earth. I gave an answer based on general relativity. Dr. Martin said that it was a great answer, it just didn’t agree with what the vast majority of physicists think.
I thought the best moment of the debate happened during the question/answer period.
A questioner asked how reliable dating methods are. Dr. Martin said very reliable. He specifically said that carbon-14 dating is accurate to within 100 years or so. I chimed in with, “Well, unless it is dinosaur fossils being dated. Then, of course, it’s useless.” The audience applauded that, and Dr. Martin once again contended that the carbon-14 in dinosaur bones must be contamination. I discussed the several tests made to ensure that was not the case.
I really wish the audience had been more balanced.
I would have liked some tough questions, and I think the audience would have benefited from hearing them. Nevertheless, they did benefit from hearing Dr. Martin’s presentation, rebuttal, and answers, so overall, I thought it was another great debate.
UPDATE: I ran across this account of the debate, which was written almost 3 months after it happened.