I'm not even a palaeaontologist and I know that's a big fat stupid lie.
Indeed. There are some transitions that are remarkably well documented, such as the evolution of whales from land mammals, and mammals from reptiles. IIRC, making this (astonishingly venal) claim requires some semantic weaselling, that all these transitional fossils were fully functional species and therefore not transitional. (This of course betrays a misunderstanding of what 'transitional' means - the two are not mutually exclusive - and a misunderstanding of what a species is. It's a property of an actual population, not some fundamental unchanging essence of dogness or antelopeness or whatever.)
The neat thing about being a fanatic creationist is each transitional fossil find just creates two more gaps for those crazy deluded scientists to fill in!
Or you could just say this.
Evolution Fucked Your Shit Up - world's freakiest animals. And yes it does include photos of naked mole rats.
Ok, that page is bookmarked. There's some awesomeness right there, though I think some are dubious additions. The pygmy marmoset is just a tiny monkey. Cute as hell, and lives on tree sap for which they will fight gangland wars with each other, but one of the 50 freakiest animals?
The tubifex worm, on the other hand, definitely belongs. Aside from looking freaky, and being able to survive in heavily polluted areas such as sewers, they reabsorb their reproductive organs after mating. That's some quality freakiness right there.
There's Tiktaalik [link], for one. (Serendipitously, I was just reading about it.) We've discovered fossils of maybe 1% of the all the species that have ever lived.
There's a good book about that fossil by its discoverer, Neil Shubin, called Your Inner Fish. It's about how you (and other animals) develop, and what it says about our evolutionary history. (Is that where you were reading about it?)
When we went to the San Diego Wild Animal Park, I was making jokes about all the hoofed herbivores. There were goats and antilopes, and words cannot express how thrilled I was to find that there is, indeed, a transitional species. I have no idea what the real name of it is, but I call(ed) them Goatalopes.
Ayup. The herring gull, too, has a range that circles the northern hemisphere; as you move around the globe, the extant population gradually changes. The two ends overlap - and the populations representing these two ends have accumulated enough differences that they are fully speciated (where they overlap, the other end is known as the lesser black-backed gull). There no agreement on just where and how many species should be delineated.