Ninjaturtle,
it looks like 90% of natural selection was wiped out and the random mutations had to start working with a much smaller base only 250 million years ago.
Mass extinctions actually increases the speed of evolution. New envirionments to adapt to, pressure from the disaster itself, and old niches in nature becoming vacant.
For example, mammals are unlikely to have become very successful if the dinosaurs were not wiped out. Before that, they were mostly small animals serving as dinosaur food.
Of course, the fact that such extinctions occurred isn't exactly helpful for creationists, is it? If 90% of all life perished at a time in the past and evolution doesn't work, why are we all here now? Did God start another creation week? And another?
Edited to add: You seem a bit confused by saying "natural selection was wiped out." On the contrary, such disasters work as a form of natural selection. You also seem to confuse mutations and natural selection. It's natural selection working on mutations, not the other way around. And when we say mutations are random, we only mean they are not goal-oriented towards increased "fitness".
The word "random" is used by creationists in a way that indicates they don't understand it very well. A stack of cards or the flip of a coin is only random because you don't know all the details as an observer. And, natural selection, the rules of the game if you will, are the exact opposite of random.
- Jan
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- "How do you write women so well?" - "I think of a man and I take away reason and accountability." (Jack Nicholson in "As Good as it Gets")