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Ham isn't the only creationist who holds that view. A Web site, CreationWiki, developed by the Northwest Creation Network, says natural selection "explains the mechanism by which traits are selected and organisms adapt to their environment." Like Ham, the Mountlake Terrace, Wash., group argues that natural selection is only responsible for "small adaptations." But Scott, whose organization advocates evolution education, said the fossil record proves that one type of body plan can give rise to another through evolution. She said the recently discovered fossil Tiktaalik
-- a prehistoric fish with some traits like those of four-legged animals
-- shows an adaptation toward a life on land. "We have a gradual transition of vertebrate fossils from those who swim to those who have stumpy fins to those who can function well on land," Scott said. Ham acknowledged that creationists share only a limited common ground with Darwin, and he remains a staunch critic of evolution. "In regard to Darwin's overall idea, that there's no supernatural involved in formation of life, and that there's a mechanistic, materialistic mechanism to evolve creatures
-- he's totally wrong," Ham said. ___ On the Net: Answers in Genesis Creation Museum: http://www.creationmuseum.org/ National Center for Science Education: http://ncseweb.org/
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