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Q. E. D., or New Light on the Doctrine of Creation by George McCready Price
page 55 of 117 (47%)
acknowledged by some of the very best authorities to be really
indistinguishable from the modern Asiatic elephant. Several fossil bears
were long listed in scientific books; but they are all acknowledged now
to be identical with the modern grizzly, and as we have already
intimated all the modern ones ought to be put together. These modern
rationalizing methods have made but a slight impression on the vast
complex of the fossil plants and animals, affecting the names of only a
few of the larger and better known forms. In the realm of invertebrate
palæontology, however, the "splitters" are still holding high carnival,
in spite of the efforts of some very prominent scientists in the
opposite direction. For palæontologists still follow the irrational
course of inventing a new name, specific or even generic, for a form
that happens to be found in a kind of rock widely separated as to "age"
from the other beds where similar forms are accustomed to be found. As
Angelo Heilprin expresses it, "It is practically certain that numerous
forms of life, exhibiting no distinctive characters of their own, are
constituted into distinct species _for no other reason than that they
occur in formations widely separated from those holding their nearest
kin_."[17]

As a result of these methods this same author declares: "It is by no
means improbable that many of the older _genera_, now recognized as
distinct by reason of our imperfect knowledge concerning their true
relationships, have in reality representatives living in the modern
seas."[18]

[Footnote 17: "Geographical and Geological Distribution of Animals," pp.
183, 184.]

[Footnote 18: _Id_., pp. 207, 208.]
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