Armored
Fish Fossils Rewrite Evolutionary Story by Brian Thomas, M.S. *
A special set of Australian fish fossils just derailed evolution's long-held
story of early fish origins. The remarkable fossils preserved detailed soft
tissue body features, including the precise points where muscles attached to the
ancient fish's bones. These clues enabled paleontologists to reconstruct the
now-extinct fish anatomy. Though expecting something much more
primitive-looking, they discovered completely designed, fully-muscled armored
fish. Now they have to rewrite the evolutionary bit about how jaws evolved.1
The extinct fish in question are called "placoderms." Australian scientists
described how for decades evolution has held to a "shark model" of jaw origins,
which had placoderm muscles structured similarly to that of modern sharks. They
published their findings in Science.2
Shark skulls hinge side-to-side, and they use side-oriented muscles. But
placoderm skulls hinge up-and-down. Of course, they couldn't actually move up
and down unless they also had muscles in the right places. The textbook
evolutionary tale explains that the first fish to evolve jaws—as opposed to
lampreys which have sucker-like mouths without jaws—had not yet evolved the
fuller musculature required to move the head and jaws in powerful and effective
coordination. These new finds show that placoderms had everything they needed
for proper and complete jaw function.
These armored fish "present an anatomy that differs radically from the shark
model," according to the study authors.2
Challenging this shark model dogma is a big deal, since placoderms supposedly
represent the very first and "most primitive versions of jawed vertebrate
anatomy."2 What evolutionist would not be interested in finding out more about
the supposed "transition from jawless to jawed vertebrates?"
Lo and behold, placoderms had well-developed neck and trunk musculature that
operated their jaws in much the same way as other living animals—but not sharks.
The fish's muscles were at some point mineralized, preserving their shapes.
These ancient armored fish's muscles held the antagonistic posture required to
elevate their heads, open their lower jaws, and snap them together for feeding.
The bottom line? These supposedly primitive fish—purported to represent the
advent of jaw evolution—occur fully formed, with no hint of the evolutionary
transition that evolutionists had for so long imagined. This discovery forced
the study authors to invent a new twist in evolution's old tale. Instead of
trunk or stomach muscles evolving eons after the first jaw, they evolved early
in these supposedly first-jawed fishes. The muscles then disappeared in later
descendants, only to "re-evolve" later still.
The creation explanation needs no such rewrite or side-story. Scripture is clear
that the Lord, not nature, designed fish. Scripture also clearly relates how the
world suffered a globe-destroying Flood that undoubtedly ended many ocean
creatures' lives, as well as air-breathing land creatures not on board Noah's
ark. Thus, the Flood is likely responsible for the remarkable mineralization and
rapid burial of these Australian placoderms.
Another corollary to the Flood model may explain why these particular fish occur
in lower sedimentary layers. It's not because they evolved first. Instead, it's
likely because their heavy bony armor slowed them so they were unable to escape
fast-moving Flood waters.3
In any case, this finding clearly shows that placoderms, the supposedly earliest
jawed fishes, had everything they needed right from the start, just as though
they were created.
References
1.This episode of evolutionary history already drags baggage, as fossils have so
far failed to confirm either of two main competing theories of jaw evolution—the
"serial theory" and a more convoluted "composite theory."
2.Trinajstic, K. et al. Fossil Musculature of the Most Primitive Jawed
Vertebrates. Science. 341 (6142): 160-164.
3.For example, world renowned vertebrate fossil authority Clack noted that an
Australian fossil cache contained "…a spectacular number of fossil fishes in
extensive bedding planes that probably represent mass mortality events. Most of
the fishes are placoderms." Clack, J. A. 2012. Gaining Ground, Second Edition:
The Origin and Evolution of Tetrapods (Life of the Past). Bloomington, IN:
Indiana University Press, 78.
Image credit: © Citron / CC-BY-SA-3.0
* Mr. Thomas is Science Writer at the Institute for Creation Research.