Now as to evolution, please explain the mechanism for the synthesis of human hemoglobin. State the number of amino acids in the alpha and the beta chains. Tell readers how many amino acids are used in this sequence, and state the probability of producing this formulation from random mutation, followed by natural selection.
You do realize that hemoglobin is an evidence for vertebrate common ancestry right?
From
here (actually just a bit up at the Lamprey's Tale.
"In human, four haemoglobin genes are known to be cousin genes of each other. An ancestor globin gene from an ancient vertebrate split into two genes, alpha and beta, which ended up in two different chromosomes and continued to evolve independently. Both alpha and beta further split into more independently evolving genes. All jawed fish show such alpha/beta split as predicated by evolution. However, lampreys and hagfish are ancient enough that they predate this gene split. In fact, jawless fishes, whenever investigated, do not possess split globin genes."
There is SO "no controversy" that National Geographic magazine featured a "missing link" a few years ago on its cover. It was, like so many other "missing links," a fraud, but hey, to Darwinists, frauds are "no controversy."
Example/s? If you're referring to Archaeoraptor, that was a failure of journalism (the editors didn't vet the fossil before running the story) and actually the real parts of the fraudulent chimera turned out to have some paleontological value after all.
And the smooth transition of millions of fossils.... nowhere to be found.
They were promised, but new finds almost always create bigger gaps instead of filling them in.
Only by people appealing to Zeno's paradox. Here's one example of smooth transition:
http://www.don-lindsay-archive.org/creation/orbulina.html
and a few more:
http://www.don-lindsay-archive.org/creation/fossil_series.html
But the because vertebrates are more sexy people often want to see them and demand every single species have at least one individual lucky enough to have been fossilized. Of course they ignore the fact that if transitionals supposedly don't exist, the fact that we have a single one, much less quite a number of vertebrate series' is convienently ignored.
I am reminded of the words of a prominent Darwinist when a fossil supposed to be transitional between land based mammals and the whales was claimed to be "the most beautiful a Darwinist could hope for."
You must be an evangelical. The reason I conclude this is that Creationists who are evangelical tend to be overly fond of quote mining in the same way they are of proof texting.
What does this transition to a whale look like? A crocodile.
Why would a terrestrial mammal transitioning into a whale look like a reptile? Instead of linking to a list of transitional whale fossils, how about we do a thought exercise. If it's impossible for a terrestrial mammal to transition into a whale we should not be able to find a series of analogues in extant species... except:
Terrestrial but comfortable in the ocean - Polar Bear
Terrestrial but more comfortable in the ocean - Otter
Marine but still comfortable on the land - Sea Lion
Fully marine but lives close to the shore - Manatee
Fully marine and comfortable in the open ocean - Dolphin
If we have living analogues to the points of transition we'd expect for terrestrial mammal to whale, what makes whale evolution impossible?