Here is a link. If this experiment had gone differently evolution would have been falsified. IT includes links to journal articles.
myxo.css.msu.edu/ecoli/
Here are some (not all are valid for what you want):
ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Search&db=pubmed&term=evolution+experiments&tool=QuerySuggestion
How many do you want?
Just one. The one where they really produced evolution. It’s all very cute to throw a zillion articles out there, most of which are not actually accessible from the sites you give. But, looking at a few, this is all “when there’s lots of salmon, bears that are good at fishing proliferate, but when there’s no salmon, but lots of grubs, bears that thrive on grubs and are good at digging them up proliferate. Now, here’s all the stats about that.” Any cattleman with enough time and a mastery of statistics could do the same thing, and some have. But they’re still just cattle. You still have not come up with the experiment where the composition of the earth is reproduced, and you have dodged the question whether you reject the existence of black holes as soundly as you reject religion. I am not going to make my occupation chasing your red herrings and watching you bob and weave. You don’t have it, pardner. You don’t have where someone actually produced real evolution (not just some actuation or accentuation of a trait already existing within the DNA of the thing being experimented upon); a real species change. If you did, you wouldn’t cite me to a list of a hundred articles and tell me to go read them and find what you’re not willing to specifically point out. You would produce the article or the cite to it, the one that really does what you want. No, you would cite to me the explosive headlines in “Newsweek” announcing the dramatic breakthrough.
You have abandoned the “creating life out of nonlife” part of the evolution question. Might be true, but you haven’t come up with the lab that did it.
So you don’t misunderstand, I don’t particularly question evolution. What my actual point is, is that you accept things as true that are not established in the way you ask believers to do when it comes to their belief in God. You just plain don’t want to believe in God, and that’s a choice, not a scientifically-based position. The truth is, and some of the articles you have cited actually point this out, there is really no single yardstick for “scientific belief”. Some things are only mathematical conclusions that are accepted by the scientific community because they cannot be refuted and appear consistent with other mathematical calculations that have also been accepted. That’s a linguistic method of arriving at a logical belief in something, many, many things actually, that can never be lab tested, reproduced physically or proved in any other way. If you limit your beliefs to things that can be empirically proved and reproduced, then you’re not going to believe in a great deal of what is accepted in the scientific community, and I doubt you really do that. Thus my question about black holes which, of course, you have never really answered.
Yet, you say to believers “without using your language or logic, prove to me that God exists”. That’s like telling Stephen Hawking to prove the existence of wormholes without using mathematics. It is at least as impossible to prove empirically that God exists as it is to prove empirically what’s really going on in a black hole, or a “string” or a “brane” or any of the other myriad things scientists believe are a particular way. Science will almost certainly always have to do without examining what’s really going on in the core of the sun. Yet most would agree that it is just unreasonable to say it’s unworthy of study or that nothing can be believed about it or there can’t be anything there because we can’t get a thimbleful of it to hold it in a test tube and make another one just like it for comparison. You’re just asking everybody to play with a deck you stacked. And really, it’s getting boring.