The mitochondria. This organelle has it own circular DNA and make some of its own proteins. Strongly suggesting bacterial origins.
Short answer: yes. Everything we observe about the shape, behaviour and genetics of organisms in all shapes and sizes can and does provide evidence for evolution.
In themselves, they do not.
Fossils Further evidence is derived from living organisms Bones
That which does not provide evidence for evolution is not necessarily something that tends to disprove evolution. So it is hard to narrow down to something relevant but does not provide evidence for evolution. As for something that actually tends to disprove evolution, this is equally hard but for different reasons - the evidence for evolution is so overwhelming that there is very little that can provide any form of contrary evidence.
mitochonria
it you
Protein or energy.
Anchoring of organelles AND Shape
The mitochondria
Yes but you need to provide compelling evidence to the court. The judge will review the evidence and issue a ruling.Yes but you need to provide compelling evidence to the court. The judge will review the evidence and issue a ruling.Yes but you need to provide compelling evidence to the court. The judge will review the evidence and issue a ruling.Yes but you need to provide compelling evidence to the court. The judge will review the evidence and issue a ruling.
Evidence can prove, or disprove, the case against you.
The cytoskeleton of the cell, made of microtubules to move organelles, microfilaments to contract the cell, especially during cell division, and intermediate filaments to provide support and anchor the organelles, does all of these things.
Is there a list? Continental drift is real, so religious fanatics don't provide evidence for continental drift.
Scientists saw that the membranes of mitochondria and chloroplasts resembled the cell membranes of free-living prokaryotes. This led to two hypotheses. One proposed that mitochondria evolved from endosymbiotic prokaryotes that were able to use oxygen to generate energy rich ATP. The other proposed that chloroplasts evolved from endosymbiotic prokaryotes that had he ability to photosynthesize. Mitochondria and chloroplasts share many features with free-living bacteria, such as there ribosomes have similar size and structure and they reproduce by binary fission. These similarities provide strong evidence of a common ancestry between bacteria and the organelles of living eukaryotic cells.
yo but holeLimestone deposits that began as coral reefs provide evidence of how plate motions have changed Earth's surface. These deposits also provide evidence of past environments.
Evidence can be admitted by either side; however, typically, the prosecution is expected to provide proof beyond a reasonable doubt, through the evidence they've obtained.
Short answer: yes. Everything we observe about the shape, behaviour and genetics of organisms in all shapes and sizes can and does provide evidence for evolution.