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Post by Pincho Paxton on Jul 8, 2016 6:29:15 GMT
I have concentrated on worm to Salamander to Fish. It is easy to get salamander to lizard to bird also. But Salamander to Insect?
Insect evolution seems strange from any angle.
I base an insect physics on the physics of a snowflake which is for gravity to propagate inwards towards a small dot, or point. That gets you the common six legged body propagation, and the inwards propagation may shrink a salamander to the size of an insect.
It just seems odd, although salamander to wasp is not quite so odd.
Or maybe we branch from the worm?
Pincho Paxton
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Post by Pincho Paxton on Jul 8, 2016 6:37:42 GMT
This is what the internet says... Evolution of insectsWhich can't be quite right, because it is just as hard to get to crustaceans as it is to insects, so I don't count that as an answer. How did crustaceans evolve? No answer on the internet, so the link to insect is a paradoxical cheat. I should therefore probably include crustacean evolution in this thread. Pincho Paxton
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Post by Pincho Paxton on Jul 8, 2016 7:00:06 GMT
I'm thinking that temperature is related to propagation direction like in the snowflake, so now I am thinking about a very cold environment changing metamorphosis inwards towards points to get an insect from a larger creature. Then the inwards propagation forces the skeleton to become an exoskeleton due to a reversed polarity through a membrane.
So...
1/ Cold Earth 2/ Reversed metamorphosis. 3/ Skeleton become exoskeleton.
Pincho Paxton
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