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I get some strange questions as a Creation Scientist, one of the foremost is 'how did the penguins get to the North Pole'. Well, far be it from me

to mock the so called 'scientists' that ask this question but penguins are birds...Guess what, they flew there.



PS. I am aware that there was no need to say 'so called' and then add inverted commas to 'scientists' but I felt that I had to emphasise the point.
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Magnolia21 · 22-25, F Best Comment
I direct you to the documentary series "Madagascar" to show that penguins have access to advanced systems. Common flight bored them over time.
AndysAttic · 56-60, M
@Magnolia21 I knew I should not have fallen asleep when my son and daughters were watching that....Bugger.

windinhishair · 61-69, M
Isn't "Creation Scientist" an oxymoron?

Penguins could easily have just stayed in one place and waited as plate tectonics moved the plate over the North Pole to its current location.
AndysAttic · 56-60, M
@Ynotisay Many thanks for your psychoanalysis, it means a lot to me.
windinhishair · 61-69, M
@Ynotisay They do live close to the equator in the Galapagos Islands in the Pacific Ocean. Penguin ancestors go back to the dinosaur extinction at the end of the Cretaceous Period 66 million years ago.
Ynotisay · M
@windinhishair Thanks. I was aware that a different species lived farther north which is why I never really understood the lack of proliferation in other places. They're a really interesting bird. And have been around for a long time.
ChipmunkErnie · 70-79, M
Um, there are NO penguins at the North Pole, no penguins in the Arctic.
kayoshin · 41-45, M
I think you misspelled "swam".

 
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