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“Echolocation” is used by some mammals and birds to find their way ... or hunt for food. The animal calls out, and the echo of their call allows them to locate objects.

This is Ken Ham, a publisher of the award-winning magazine for the family called Answers .

“Echolocation” is used by some mammals and birds to find their way ... or hunt for food. Now, the animal calls out, and the echo of their call allows them to locate objects. This technique is most famous -- and complex -- in bats and dolphins. But some birds and shrews use it, too.

Because echolocation is found in such diverse groups, evolutionists believe it evolved at least four times! That’s some pretty fortunate blind chance!

The evolution of echolocation is just … a story. I, for one, don’t have enough faith to believe random, chance processes could evolve echolocation once—let alone four times!

Dig Deeper


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