Charles Lyell's theory of uniformitarianism, which proposed that geological processes occurring in the past are the same as those happening today, provided a framework that influenced Charles Darwin's theory of evolution. By suggesting that Earth's processes operate gradually and consistently over long periods of time, uniformitarianism supported the idea of gradual change leading to biological diversity through natural selection, a key concept in Darwin's theory. This connection between gradual geological change and biological evolution helped shape contemporary understanding of Earth's history and the development of life.
The idea is that there is no idea:P I'm just jocking guys
The idea is that there is no idea:P I'm just jocking guys
The idea is that there is no idea:P I'm just jocking guys
important concepts they agreed upon are because uniformitarianism combines Hutton's idea of gradual change over time with lyells observations that such changes have occurred at a constant rate and are ongoing
Charles Lyell's parents were John Lyell and Elizabeth Pemberton. John Lyell was a well-to-do landowner and a member of the Scottish gentry, while Elizabeth came from a family with a background in the law. Their support and education helped shape Lyell's scientific pursuits and interests in geology.
Lyell's work explained how geological features could be built up or torn down over long periods of time.
Hutton and Lyell concluded that the Earth is extremely old and that the processes that changed Earth in the past are the same processes that operate in the present.
organisms change over time
Some creationists use this argument as "evidence" against evolution. However, the flaw in their argument is that fossils do occur, they are in order, they are separated by a large time difference, and they are transitional. The argument is commonly called the "missing link" problem, and when Darwin first developed his ideas, it actually was. He explicitly recognised it as such, and came up with several ways it would either deny or help support his theory (such as by finding rabbits in the PreCambrian era, or by the presence of missing links, which were later found). However, in the 140 years since then, we have uncovered thousands of fossilized species, each of which is a tranistional form in the evolution of several other species. The best example is that of our own ancestry; several species have been discovered, each getting closer and closer to human as we know it, and at the same time, further from the simple ape-like mammals we began as. All of this happened - according to the geological timeframe - over a period of several million years.