A'isha
Miss Schoolteacher
That's even worse. How in the world could working scientists have relied on such an obvious fake. It's not like it wasn't well know already they were fake.
I told you, the obviousness of the fakery is not nearly as blatant as your argument relies on.
But what about the considerable disparity between the images in the first edition of Haeckel’s book and the photographs by Richardson and his colleagues? Even with the exculpating logical and historical considerations I have mentioned, how could a biologist of integrity represent a salamander embryo, looking like a lopsided beach ball in the photograph, as a slim, streamlined creature? It is that magnitude of difference that condemns Haeckel. But precisely here is the most dubious aspect of the case against him: several (but not all) of the photographed embryos retain the attached yolk sack and other maternal material; this exaggerates their differences from Haeckel’s images (see Fig. 1). Haeckel explicitly indicated that he pictured his specimens without yolk, allantois, and amnion (Haeckel 1874, p. 256). The bulge of the salamander is not part of the embryo; rather, it is the yolk sack, as is the case for the fish and the human embryos (though not for the chick and the rabbit, from which the yolk sacks have been removed); moreover the salamander photo is obviously not reduced to the same scale as the others (despite the assertion in the caption for the figure in Science). The chick was photographed in a highly circumflex orientation, which occurs at a somewhat later stage of development than that represented by Haeckel. Again, Haeckel expressly stated that he oriented his embryos all in the same way for ease of comparison. I have used a computer program to remove the yolks in the photographs, scale back the salamander, and straighten out the chick (Fig. 5). The result is a bit crude, but one can clearly see that the differences between photograph and illustration are not nearly as great as presented in the Science article. Shorn of yolk, the photographed embryos would not have provided the kind of graphic evidence upon which the Science article was premised.