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Post by Pincho Paxton on Mar 20, 2021 8:16:54 GMT
Do Mammals Have A Mole Ancestor?When I study evolution I carefully go from stage to stage using metamorphic body parts. It's a metamorphic stage that gradually evolved away until today due to adaptation. Adaptation becomes none-adaptation, because the early stages of adaptation were to overcome obstacles from leaving the sea, and then moving to rough ground. For that purpose I use the worm, and not the fish, as the worm has many advantages over the fish for leaving the sea. Now the worm is on rough land, but has the ability to regenerate itself, so it is constantly regenerating itself on rough ground. This gives you the opportunity to come up with ideas for that regeneration process, and change it into metamorphism. So with a frilled sea worm on land, that can regenerate, and grow parts we can come up with ideas for it to grow legs, and fur. We want it regenerating parts that touch rough sand, like sand paper. We also want to move towards a spine that bends up/down. A worm constantly feeding materials through its body that irritate it on the inside, and outside, and the worm can regenerate itself. So with sand passing through the worm internally, and externally we have something physical to create changes in the worm, and the best land mammal to appear from all of that is the mole. From sea worm to mole... Pincho Paxton
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