The Irreducible Complexity of Wings Refutes Evolution
THE DEFICIENT BASIS OF THE DARWINIST PROPAGANDA
9- The Irreducible Complexity of Wings Refutes
Evolution(1)
Evolutionists maintain that
birds evolved from reptiles. However, there are a number of factors which refute
this. One of these is the very different surface structures of the two groups.
Birds are covered in feathers, and reptiles with
scales. These structures are very different to one another, and there exists
not a single fossil specimen to support the claim that feathers evolved from
scales.
The Sensitive Design in Feathers
Feathers are “the
most complex epidermal appendages found in animals.”(2)
Designed with great sensitivity, these structures allow birds to fly, and are
highly productive but very light. Moreover, bird wing feathers are themselves
“one of the most beautifully designed structures in the world.”
From the point of view of their dimensions, form, color and tissue, feathers
possess such an enormous variety that few works of art can compare with the
color harmony in them.(3)
The famous ornithologist Alan Feduccia describes
the design in feathers as follows:
They are lightweight, strong,
aerodynamically shaped, and have an intricate structure of barbs and hooks.
This structure makes them waterproof, and a quick preen with the beak with
the bill will cause flattened feathers to snap into fully aerodynamic shape
again. (4)
The microscopic hook system in feathers
There may be as many as 1 million barbules on a
single flight feather of a large bird.(5)The
picture to the side shows the tiny hooklets and grooves on the barbules of a
feather magnified 20,000 times.(6) Thanks to
the design in these hooklets the barbules are able to move away from one another
under pressure, and the bird’s wing and feathers are thus prevented from
being damaged in high winds.
Evolutionists claim that feathers evolved from
the scales on birds’ alleged ancestors—reptiles. The fact is, however,
that scales are folds in the skin, whereas feathers emerge from follicles in
the skin, in a similar manner to hairs. Feathers consist of barbs, barbules
and hook. Furthermore, the places where barbules and scales emerge from are
very different.
The Complexity in Feathers
Feathers and other structures comprise the bird’s
plumage. The plumage, together with dermal and subdermal muscles, ligaments,
the brain and sensory organs, comprises an interconnected structure requiring
the functioning of a complex unit, otherwise it will not be possible for the
feather to function in a healthy manner. Moreover, with such details as its
angle, thickness and shape, the range of variation which can be tolerated in
the construction of the feather is very narrow. Even the slightest deviations
can render this entire flight system non-functioning. When the follicle structure
and complexity are added to this, the scenario of this system coming about by
means of evolution becomes totally nonsensical. In fact, even to guess the stages
of this imaginary evolution appears impossible.
The difficulty of this is admitted in one evolutionist
publication:
The chief difficulty in thinking
about the evolution of the first feathers is the difficulty in accounting
for the genesis of the structure through a continuous sequence of selective
forces and with a continuous series of hypothetical morphological steps* that
are functionally plausible. (7)
* Hypothetical morphological steps: Steps presumed
to have been taken by feathers during their alleged evolution, structural steps
of different appearances.
The following comment appears in
another evolutionist publication, “Even speculating
on the most primitive stages of the evolution of feathers is very problematic.”
(8)
The Irreconcilable Differences between Scales
and Feathers
detail of a bird feather
detail of a reptile scales
The pictures on the right clearly reveal the differences
between scales and feathers. The considerable differences between feathers and
scales exist among the genes in which the data for the two structures are coded
at the genetic level. This inevitably leads to the question of how, during the
alleged transition to birds, and by what mechanism a scale-covered reptile could
have acquired the necessary data for the bird feather. According to the theory
of evolution, the genetic information for feathers, which did not at that time
yet exist in nature, must have been new, and furthermore this information must
have been added to the reptile DNA by a natural causes-based mechanism. Evolutionists
suggest random mutations for that alleged mechanism. However, it is a known
fact that mutations do not add new genetic information to living things, and
can therefore have no evolutionary effect. Quite helpless when it comes to proposing
a mechanism, evolutionists refuse to abandon their claim, and follow the logic
of “It exists, therefore it evolved.” In other words, they blindly
defend the idea that feathers evolved from scales.
Evolutionists seek to resolve their dilemma over
the evolution of feathers by adding a speculative phase to the scenario. They
maintain that feathers first appeared on dinosaurs in such a way as to provide
thermal insulation, and that these later evolved and specialized in such a way
as to be beneficial for flight. This is yet another of evolutionists’
“Just So Stories.” It is very easy to come up with such tales. First
of all the advantage(s) of a given feature of a living thing is described. A
scenario is then produced as to how this advantage might have evolved. In practice,
of course, there is no limit to the evolutionist theses which can be produced
in this way. Like all other “Just So Stories,” this evolutionary
tale is unable to provide any answer as to how new genetic information might
have emerged.
Another important point on this
subject is that the feather structure in flightless birds totally contradicts
the claim that the alleged evolution of the feather took place first for thermal
insulation and then for flight. When the feathers of flightless birds such as
the chicken are examined they are different to the feathers of flying birds.
The feathers of flightless birds have a contoured structure rather than the
aerodynamic structure in flying birds. These contours resemble the hairs which
cover the mammalian body. What needs to be realized about that similarity is
that the hairs on mammals regulate thermal insulation in a particularly sound
manner.(9) Contoured feathers which make flight
impossible will therefore represent an advantage in terms of insulation.
That advantage deals a fatal blow to the evolutionist
scenario that the transition to flight took place after thermal insulation.
According to that scenario, feathers assumed to have evolved initially for insulation
should have a contoured structure, in which case only feathers which provide
greater thermal insulation, in other words more contoured feathers, will be
selected. For that reason, the hypothetical progress from a contoured structure
to an aerodynamic one will be eliminated.
It thus appears that there is no evidence that
the feather structure will evolve from thermal insulation to flight. Indeed,
it must be thought that the hair-like feathers of flightless birds will work
in the exact opposite direction. In short, evolutionists are constructing fantasies,
and swimming against the current.
There is also an important biochemical difference
between scales and feathers. Both consist of keratin (a kind of protein, the
building block of human hair); feathers are made from F-keratin, and scales
from a-keratin. However, the biochemical routes of these two types of keratin
are very different: A. H. Brush, a foremost authority on the subject, states:
At the morphological level feathers
are traditionally considered homologous with reptilian scales. However, in
development, morphogenesis (shape/form generation), gene structure, protein
shape and sequence, and filament formation and structure, feathers are different.
(10)
The Fossil Record Refutes Feather Evolution
The irreconcilable differences
between scales and feathers clearly reveal the invalidity of the evolutionists’
claims. In addition, the oldest known bird, Archaeopteryx, has an asymmetrical
feather structure identical to that of modern flying birds. In other words,
the oldest known bird emerged with the most perfect feather structure, whereas
the theory of evolution would expect a “primitive” structure. The
researchers L. Martin and S. A. Czerkas state that, “The
oldest known feathers … are already modern in form and microscopic detail.”
(11)
These words demonstrate that the
fossil record invalidates the scenarios of feather evolution. A Columbia University
biologist makes the same admission, saying that no transitional form exists
between the most primitive feather in our possession and reptilian scales.(12)
Comments from an Aerodynamicist
Dr. Andy McIntosh, a member of the Leeds University
academic staff and an expert on aerodynamics, described the superior design
in feathers in an interview:
Bird flight in particular is remarkable; consider
feathers. If you look at a feather under a microscope, you see the main stem,
with barbs coming out to the left and right, and from these you have left-and
right-handed barbules. Now the interesting bit is that the left-handed ones
have hooks, and the right-handed ones have ridges.
That’s right. The feather is made such that if you bend it, everything
bends with it, and yet it’s a very light structure. So the hooks catch
the ridges and they slide over the ridges—it’s a mechanical engineer’s
dream to have such useful, lightweight engineering. But if you have a sliding
joint, you need lubrication. To do this the bird twists its neck around 180º
and dips its beak into a tiny oil gland right down at the back of its spine.
It then preens itself, wiping this oil all over its feathers, so that they
join together nicely, and these sliding joints are oiled. That’s
a marvellous bit of engineering. I have seen a photo in a book, of an aircraft landing at
Hong Kong and underneath it is a falcon landing at the same time. Now as you
look at birds and planes together, are you going to say that one is designed
and the other isn’t? I would find that scientifically
preposterous.(13)
Another Major Blow to the Bird Evolution Scenario:
Peacock Feathers
Another important example to reveal
the invalidity of the scenarios of bird evolution is the peacock feather. The
design which gives these creatures their wonderful colors and patterns points
to intelligent design, as it is both most aesthetically pleasing and exceedingly
complex. That explains why when Charles Darwin saw the beauty-filled design
in peacock feathers he realized he was looking at the inconsistency of his own
theory, and admitted, “The sight of a feather in
a peacock's tail, whenever I gaze at it, makes me sick!”(14)
There are geometrical designs in the peacock feather which are based on mathematical
equations. One astonishing feature of the wondrous colors in these feathers,
which change according to the angle of light reflection, is that they are not
based on pigments. Researchers who have studies this design have revealed that
the layers of the feathers are very carefully designed and that the structure
which gives rise to the pattern is irreducibly complex. Such a feather design
cannot, of course, be explained in terms of imaginary processes based on natural
causes, and demonstrates the invalidity of Darwinism.
Conclusion:
There are major anatomical differences between
living birds and living reptiles, their alleged ancestors. Robert Caroll, a
world expert of vertebrate paleontology, says the following on the subject:
Birds are ‘the most clearly
distinct of vertebrate classes’ and there’s an enormous gap in
anatomy, and way of life between birds and their putative closest relatives,
reptiles.(15)
These words are an important admission. They refute
the evolutionist thesis that there was evolution between the two groups, either
in the fossil record or among living specimens.
Evolutionists support scenarios of bird evolution
not because they are a consistent thesis based on scientific evidence, but as
a dogma adopted for philosophical reasons. There is only one explanation for
the complex design in bird feathers and the absence in the fossil record of
any specimen which might represent support for evolution. Birds did not evolve,
but were intelligently brought into being. In other words, they were created.
There is no doubt that God, the all-knowing and Almighty, created the perfect
structures in birds and their flying abilities.
The ability to fly given to birds by God is revealed
in one verse of the Qur’an as follows:
Do they not see the birds suspended in mid-air
up in the sky? Nothing holds them there except God. There are certainly Signs
in that for people who believe. (Qur’an, 16:79)
1 Jonathan D. Sarfati, Refuting Evolution, Chapter
4; Dr. Jerry Bergman, "The Evolution of Feathers: A Major Problem for Darwinism",
Technical Journal 17(1), 2003, pp. 33-41
2 R. O. Prum, and S. Williamson, “Theory of the Growth and Evolution of
Feather Shape”, Journal of Experimental Zoology (Molecular Developmental
Evolution) 291: 30-57, 2001
3 R. O. Prum, and S. Williamson, “Theory of the Growth and Evolution of
Feather Shape”, Journal of Experimental Zoology (Molecular Developmental
Evolution) 291: 30-57, 2001
4 A. Feduccia, The Origin and Evolution of Birds (New Haven, CT: Yale
University Press, 1996), p. 130
5 Michael Denton, Evolution: A Theory in Crisis, Adler and Adler, Bethesda,
p. 202, 1986
6 Photos: courtesy of David Menton
7 P. Regal, “The Evolutionary origin of Feathers”, The Quarterly
Review of Biology, 50(1): 35-66, 1975:pp. 35-36 8 W. J. Bock, “Explanatory History of the Origin
of Feathers”, American Zoologist, 40: 478-485
9 A. Feduccia, The Origin and Evolution of Birds (New Haven, CT: Yale
University Press, 1996), p. 130.
10 A. H. Brush, "On the Origin of Feathers," Journal of Evolutionary
Biology, 9:131-142, 1996
11 L. Martin, and S. A. Czerkas, “The Fossil Record of Feather Evolution
in the Mesozoic”, American Zoologist, 40: 687-694, 2000; p. 687
12 W. J. Bock, “Explanatory History of the Origin of Feathers”,
American Zoologist, 40: 480
13“Flying High”, An interview with Dr. Andy McIntosh, http://www.answersingenesis.org/home/area/magazines/docs/v20n2_mcintosh.asp
14 F. Darwin, (Ed), Letter to Asa Gray, dated 3 April 1860, The Life and
Letters of Charles Darwin, John Murray, London, Vol. 2, pp. 296, 1887;
1911 Edition, D. Appleton and Company, New York and London, Vol. 2, pp. 90–91
15 R. Caroll, Patterns and Processes of Vertebrate Evolution, Cambridge
University Press, New York, 1997 p. 306