'Ancient' Bacteria Still Alive and Not
Evolved
by
Brian Thomas, M.S. *
Archaeans are amazing
microbes that run on completely different metabolic processes than other
microbes. Discovering the first of them must have been like finding a car that
runs on hydrogen fuel cells amidst a landscape of gasoline-powered vehicles.
This was the privilege of evolutionary biologist Carl Woese, who died on
December 30, 2012.1How did he interpret these findings, and what
should we remember about his contributions?
Woese was famous for adding
a whole new major classification of microbes, called archaea, that biology
textbooks published about well within his lifetime. But the name assigned to
this unique domain of life reflects evolutionary concepts, not science.
The biochemistry of these
tiny survivors is so fundamentally different from most oxygen-burning creatures
that evolutionists like Woese believed it must have evolved way back when the
first normally-functioning bacteria were also inventing themselves. The name
"archaea" derives from the Greek word "arkhaios," meaning
ancient or primitive.
But though these bacteria
defy so many norms of microbial life, they don't appear ancient at all.
Scientists observe them alive today, albeit in hostile places like deep sea
toxic vents. Why call them ancient if scientists did not actually observe them
billions of supposed years ago?
In fact, Woese was familiar
with at least two reasons why archaea could never have evolved. First, their
fundamentally different biochemistry is fully formed and well designed.2 It
consists of interdependent arrays of molecular machines with form-fitted
protein parts. Nature alone couldn't generate all of the miraculous
biochemistry on which familiar oxygen-burning cells depend, just like nature
alone couldn't generate gasoline burning engines in cars.3 Therefore
the discovery of bacteria that live on sulfur, for example, doubles both the
biochemical barriers that evolution cannot hurdle and the credit that the
Creator deserves for constructing them.4
Second, without microbes
and other organisms with extreme diets, like those that eat oil5 or
survive radiation6 and other extreme living conditions like
saturated salt, the life-giving properties of earth's atmosphere would not
exist. Woese told The New York Times in 1996, "If microbial life were to
disappear, that would be it -- instant death for the planet."7 That
means Woese was familiar with the appearance of purpose in bacteria on a
planetary level—they appear to have been created to maintain the grand earth
systems that support plants and animals.8
Revealing the amazing
designs of archaeans' unique ways of life is commendable, but naming them
"archaean" merely reinforces unscientific evolutionary ideas.
Unfortunately, Woese's legacy includes twisting the facts of God's creation to
fit the falsehood of evolution.
References
- Zielinska,
E. Evolutionary Biologist Dies. The
Scientist. Posted on the-scientist.com January 2, 2013, accessed
January 8, 2013.
- Thomas,
B. Exploring Earth's Extremes in a
Futile Quest for Life in Space. Creation Science
Update. May 11, 2010, accessed January 8, 2013.
- Morton,
J. S. 1980. Glycolysis and Alcoholic
Fermentation. Acts & Facts. 9 (12).
- Sherwin,
F. Reheating the Prebiotic Soup.
Institute for Creation Research. Posted on icr.org September 1, 2003,
accessed January 8, 2013.
- Thomas,
B. Oil-eating Bacteria Are
Cleaning Up Gulf. Creation Science Update. Posted
on icr.org August 27, 2010, accessed January 8, 2013.
- Thomas,
B. Life Thrives amid Chernobyl's
Leftover Radiation. Creation Science Update. Posted
on icr.org February 8, 2011, accessed January 8, 2013.
- Blakeslee,
S. Microbial Life's Steadfast
Champion. The New York Times. Posted on
nytimes.com October 15, 1996, accessed January 8, 2013.
- Thomas,
B. New Insights into Earth's
Nitrogen-Balancing System. Creation Science Update. Posted
on icr.org November 21, 2011, accessed January 8, 2013.
Image
credit: National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
* Mr.
Thomas is Science Writer at the Institute for Creation Research.
Article
posted on January 14, 2013.
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