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50-
to 35-Million-Year-Old Baltic Amber |
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Beetle larva, 50-35
million years old. |
Spider, 50-35 million
years old. |
Caddis with larva,
50-35 million years old. |
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Caddis fly, 50-35 million
years old. |
Beetle, 50-35 million
years old. |
True midge, 50-35 million
years old. |
According
to the theory of evolution, half-winged, odd-looking,
functionless creatures must have existed on Earth millions
of years ago. Yet the fossil record refutes Darwinists.
Specimens perfectly preserved in amber have totally demolished
the myth of the evolutionary process. |
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True midge, 50-35 million
years old. |
Beetle, 50-35 million
years old. |
Beetle, 50-35 million
years old. |
God
has created all living things. Millions-of-year-old fossil
specimens have once again revealed this in the most perfect
manner. God, the Sublime and Almighty One, is the Creator
of all living things. |
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Fungus
gnat, 50-35 million years old. |
Spider, 50-35 million
years old. |
True midge, 50-35 million
years old. |
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|
Ant, 50-35 million
years old. |
A mosquito in Dominican
amber, 23-14 million years old. |
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Flies
living some 50 million years ago looked at the world
through perfect and highly complex compound eyes and
were able to fly using the same perfect mechanism.
None of these creatures have ever been subjected to
evolution. They all possessed the same flawless equipment
50 million years ago as they do today. |
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Bristletail (Archaeognatha) in
Baltic amber,54-23 million years old. |
Springtail (Collembola) in
Dominican amber, 23-14 million years old. |
Crane fly, 50-35
million years old. |
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Ant, 50-35 million
years old. |
Spider, 50-35 million
years old. |
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50-
to 35- Million-Year-Old Baltic Amber |
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Spider, Family Uloboridae,
50-35 million years old. |
Spider's web, 50-35
million years old. |
Twisted-wing insect
(Strepsiptera), 50-35 million years old. |

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A crane fly with about
20 mites, 50-35 million years old. |
Cicada nymph, 50-35
million years old. |
Ant, 50-35 million
years old. |
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Rove beetle, 50-35
million years old. |
Spider with web, 50-35
million years old. |
A moth and an ant head,
24 million years old. |
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A 38- to 23-million-year
old wasp in Dominican amber. |
Beetle, 50-35 million
years old. |
Spider, 50-35 million
years old. |
The
fossil record contains not a single example of the imaginary "intermediate" species
or missing links—which evolutionists claim must
have existed. Fossils demonstrate that plants and animals
that lived millions of years ago are structurally the
same as their counterparts today. |
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True midge, 50-35 million
years old. |
Spider, 50-35 million
years old. |
Fungus gnat, 50-35
million years old. |
|
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|
Dance fly, 50-35 million
years old. |
Termite, 50-35 million
years old. |
Beetle larva, 50-35
million years old. |
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Sand fly, 50-35 million
years old. |
Parasitic mite larva
on a long-legged fly (Diptera Dolichopodidae). |
A cricket, Orthoptera,
in a 24-million-year old Dominican amber. |
Insect,
fly, and wasp fossils from some 50 million years ago
represent a major challenge to Darwinism. According to
the theory of evolution, these creatures went through
an imaginary process of evolution and should have acquired
intermediate-form characteristics. Yet they are identical
to members of the same species today. This is definitive
proof that living things never underwent evolutionary
changes. |
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A large fly in a 24-million-year
old Dominican amber. |
A male winged ant, Hymenoptera,
Formicidae, 25 million years old. |
An adult planthopper
in a 24-million-year old Dominican amber. |
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