examining the sequence of the components of a specific protein. Relationship is established by the number .
of changes required to convert a protein o!.
f one organism in to the corresponding protein of another - the fewer changes, the closer the relationship. .
This comparison can also be made using genetic material. There is NO evidence on the molecular level for .
evolution. Each of the many categories of organisms appear to be equally isolated. For example, by .
isolating one protein (cytochromec) from a snake and comparing it with 47 different life forms, it was .
shown that the rattlesnake was most similar to man, not to any other reptile(based on that one .
protein).(Gray,1980). If evolution had occurred, that contradiction, and hundreds of similar ones, could not .
have been found. Dr. Colin Patterson (1981) was the Senior Principal Scientific Office0r in the .
Paleontology Department at the British Museum of Natural History, and he said that "evolution was a .
faith," and that he had" been duped into taking evolutionism as revealed truth in some way; that evolution .
not only conveys no knowledge but seems somehow to convey anti-!.
knowledge, apparent knowledge which is harmful to systematic [the science of classifying different forms .
of life]." (Patterson, 1981). The renowned Carl Sagan tells us that the genetic information contained in .
EACH CELL of the human body is roughly equivalent to a library of 4000 volumes. It is difficult to .
believe that random selection could produce those amounts of meaningful information. Each DNA cell .
requires 20 different types of proteins; but the proteins can not be produced EXCEPT at the direction of the .
DNA cell. This "manufacturing system" had to have come into existence simultaneously with the DNA .
cell. Chemistry Professor John Walton(1977) of Scotland (from whence came the now-famous sheep-.
cloning) said "the origin of the genetic code presents formidable unsolved problems.