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Anyone open for a discussion on this?
A human embryo has neither gills nor a tail. Certainly it has pharyngeal pouches, but these develop into the facial features and form internal structures such as tonsils, chewing muscles, the inner ear, etc. and have nothing to do with breathing. Human lungs develop from the gastrointestinal tract.Anyone open for a discussion on this?
A human embryo has neither gills nor a tail. Certainly it has pharyngeal pouches, but these develop into the facial features and form internal structures such as tonsils, chewing muscles, the inner ear, etc. and have nothing to do with breathing.
Similarly, even humans born with structures that appear superficially to resemble tails do not actually have tails. There is never any sign of bone structure, intelligent movement, etc. Many born with "tails" actually suffer from spina bifida, a congenital defect.
No we don't.something we call a vestigial feature.
There is definitely a post-anal tail. There is no doubt about that.
A post-anal tail is a muscular region of the body that extends
posterior to the anus. The post-anal tail may aid locomotion
and balance. Chordate
https://zfin.org/GO:0036342
Anyone open for a discussion on this?
One of the arches becomes your jaw. There are no slits.
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In fish, those same arches become gills. We have the same basic embryological features early in development because of our fish ancestors.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3263034/There is definitely a post-anal tail. There is no doubt about that.
However, you are correct about the pharyngeal slits. These same slits do develop into gills in fish.
Sometimes, humans keep developing these tails with apoptosis removing them during embryonic development. The result is a tail with bones.
![]()
That is an x-ray of a real human with a real tail with real bones (c1-c3 for caudal 1-3).
We even still have the extensor coccygis muscle that spans two fused vertebrae in the tail bone, but is used to lift the tail in other species. A bone that spans a fused joint, something we call a vestigial feature.
Source? So, now fish don't have jawbones?
I wonder here you get this stuff.
So now fish don't have jawbones?
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3263034/
"True human tail arises from the most distal remnant of the embryonic tail. It contains adipose tissue, connective tissue, central bundles of striated muscle, blood vessels and nerves and is covered by skin. Bone, cartilage, notochord and spinal cord are lacking. It can move and contract and occurs twice as often in males as in females. None of our patients showed any movement of the tail."
http://www.indianpediatrics.net/july1999/july-712-713.htm
"A true tail in human is vestigial and never contains vertebrae in contrast to vertebrate animals. It has been suggested that true tail is a dermal appendage coincidentally located in the sacrococcygeal region(1). In most patients it is located in the sacrococcygeal region and can be located 1.5 cm to one side. Though anomaly occurs in both sexes, a slight predominance in males is known(8). It affects all races(8). Familial cases have been reported(3). Caudal appendages are reported also to be associated with other congenital anomalies in 29% of cases(9) and spina bifida has been the most frequent coexisting anomaly."
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3263034/
"True human tail arises from the most distal remnant of the embryonic tail. It contains adipose tissue, connective tissue, central bundles of striated muscle, blood vessels and nerves and is covered by skin. Bone, cartilage, notochord and spinal cord are lacking. It can move and contract and occurs twice as often in males as in females. None of our patients showed any movement of the tail."
http://www.indianpediatrics.net/july1999/july-712-713.htm"A true tail in human is vestigial and never contains vertebrae in contrast to vertebrate animals. It has been suggested that true tail is a dermal appendage coincidentally located in the sacrococcygeal region(1). In most patients it is located in the sacrococcygeal region and can be located 1.5 cm to one side. Though anomaly occurs in both sexes, a slight predominance in males is known(8). It affects all races(8). Familial cases have been reported(3). Caudal appendages are reported also to be associated with other congenital anomalies in 29% of cases(9) and spina bifida has been the most frequent coexisting anomaly."
It does not sound very fishy to me.
Talk Origins is on par with The Institute for Creation Research in the Science community.
They don't have the additional jawbones that tetrapods have.