If this view of evolution is true, the fossil record should produce an enormous number of transitional forms.
There are. In fact, every single organism that has both parents and offspring is a transitional form.
What if none are ever found.
But they have been found. Many have been found. For instance:
quote:
Palaechthon, Purgatorius
Cantius
Pelycodus & related species
Amphipithecus, Pondaungia
Propliopithecus, Aegyptopithecus
Proconsul africanus
Australopithecus afarensis
Cimolestes incisus & Cimolestes cerberoides
Paroodectes, Vulpavus
Hesperocyon
Ursavus elmensis
Potamotherium
Pachycynodon
Dinictis
I could go on and on but you wouldn't be familiar with the species I'm referring to, and all I'm going is cutting and pasting from
Transitional Vertebrate Fossils FAQ
I don't know where you got this idea that there are no transitional fossils.
If modern-day transitional species are present would imply that all things will evolve further, including humans.
Which is certainly true. Everything continues to evolve. There are many living transitional species, like amphibians, or even the hippopotamus, clearly in a state of transition between land and water life.