Questions Evolution Does Not Answer 
gula, a brachiopod, found in the 
primordial, has continued through 
all geological time down to the 
present with its characters un¬ 
changed. Henry Fairfield Osborn 
says: “A most significant biological 
fact is that certain of the primitive¬ 
ly armored and sessile brachiopods 
of the Cambrian Seas have re¬ 
mained almost unchanged generi- 
cally for a period of thirty million 
years, down to the present time. 
These animals afford a classic illus¬ 
tration of the rather exceptional 
condition, known to evolutionists 
as balance, resulting in absolute 
stability of type. Then he cites as 
examples the Lingula and the Tere- 
bratula, belonging to widely differ¬ 
ing families of brachiopods/’ (“The 
Origin and Evolution of Life,” pp. 
121 , 122 .) 
(4) We find, moreover, that the 
total number of species has not 
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