Understand that but there seems to be so few remains found yet so many claims of how animals evolved without backup.
I'm not a creationist but I can't say I'm fully an evolutionist either.
What are you basing this "so few remains found" on? How much do you know about how fossils are formed? It's not a surprise that they're rare... You know the whole circle of life thing? The vast majority of dead animals are returned to that circle...
Fossils have provided us with a lot of evidence. It's also provided us with testable claims. People have actually hypothesized that a particular looking fossil should be found in a particular strata (depth) at a particular place. Based on this place being somewhere where fossils are more common and on the evolutionary history of other species. Then they've gone digging and found those fossils.
Fossils are just one of the many many sources of evidence for evolution though. Look at genetics. Darwin knew nothing about genetics, yet as we've discovered more and more about genetics it fits in really well with the theory of evolution. In fact it has been claimed that the genetic evidence alone is more than enough to accept evolution even if we had no fossils. Yet people hark back to fossils as if they're the make or break part of evolutionary science.
For more sources of evidence:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evidence_of_common_descent
I don't like the word "evolutionst" I'm no more an evolutionist than I'm a gravityist. It makes it seem like there's an actual discussion being had between creationists and evolutionists. In fact it's a discussion between science deniers (creationists) and those who believe in the scientific method. There is no middle ground.
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Micro evolution is a proven fact. Macro evolution isn't.
Micro and macro evolution are essentially creationist talking points. From my understanding not really terms that are being used by anyone talking seriously about evolution. It's an attempt at misinformation by those peddling a creationist/religious agenda. Not saying you're one of them, but I would suggest perhaps you've accepted some information on this that perhaps you shouldn't have. Millsy gets it spot on, "macro evolution" is just "micro evolution" + time.
Well that's the idea but my point is that all the missing species and bits in between mean its harder to refer to it as an absolute fact.
Again:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evidence_of_common_descent
The "missing species" thing is a bit of a fallacy. Creationists will keep claiming "missing links", but with no actual serious conversation being had. No actual evaluation of evidence being done.
How many "missing species" would you need to accept "macro evolution"? I'm guessing whoever convinced you on missing species being relevant had nothing to say on that?
Just for fun, list of "transitional fossils" (most fossils will of course be transitional so it's a bit of a misnomer):
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_transitional_fossils
The impressive point is not the raw number of them. It's that they all fit the model, they all fit the theory. And again, the fossil record is only a part of the available evidence for evolution (macro and micro and whatever other made up term people introduce to cause confusion for those who do not have the time or interest in actually learning about the subject).