Brain evolution?

By: James V. Kohl | Published on: January 21, 2016

To Retain a Brain

Exceptional neural fossil preservation helps answer questions about ancient arthropod evolution.

….a 2008 paper that identified a brain in a Cambrian shrimp-like arthropod…

My comment:ย  Since then, the nutrient-dependent brain development of all crustaceans has been linked to brain development in all insects and to brain development in vertebrates via their pheromone-controlled physiology of reproduction, which links biophysically constrained RNA-mediated protein folding chemistry from microbes to man — outside the context of neo-Darwinian theories.

โ€œPeople are beginning to accept that brains can fossilize.โ€

The claim that people are beginning to accept representations of fossilized brains does not fit with what is known about the links from hydrogen-atom transfer in DNA base pairs to all biomass and all biodiversity. For example, some fossilized bacteria appear to be ~2 billion years old, and some other bacteria re-evolved their flagellum over-the-weekend.


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