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Fish Forsakes Fins in Favor of Arms
May 6, 2006
A crucial fossil palaeontologists are hailing as a true “missing link” in the evolutionary record has been uncovered in the arctic. The discovery of a well preserved species of fossil fish bridges the gap between finned fish and their four legged relatives. This croco-fish creature, documented in Nature,1 named Tiktaalik roseae has joints in its […]
Doctors Deny Darwin
May 5, 2006
Doctors and medical professionals may comprise the largest block of scientists with qualms about evolution. According to a Finkelstein poll, an average of 60% of doctors, depending on religious demographics, reject the completely unguided Darwinian evolutionary explanation for life. A new organization, Physicians and Surgeons for Scientific Integrity (PSSI), has begun a website Doctors Doubting […]
Solar Eclipses Unique to Earth, SETI Researcher Finds
May 4, 2006
Like many before him, Seth Shostak pondered the significance of total solar eclipses for the one planet with observers to appreciate them. “OK, I’ve done the math,” the SETI Institute director said for SETI Thursday on Space.com. “What you always suspected might be true … is true: namely that the best place in the solar […]
Hope for Titan Ocean Evaporates into Ice Desert
May 4, 2006
Saturn’s moon Titan is a desert of sand made of ice grains mixed with hydrocarbons. These grains form large fields of wind-driven dunes found over much of the planet-sized moon. “Titan’s Seas Are Sand,” reported a press release from U of Arizona based on a paper in the May 5 issue of Science (see Perspective […]
Will Genetics Be Neo-Darwinisms Downfall?
May 4, 2006
The Institute for Creation Research is gearing up for a multi-year GENE project to look for evidence for design (and against evolution) in the genome. They may not need to work very hard. Secular scientists, by continuing to find things not all that helpful for neo-Darwinism, are doing yeoman’s work for them. While […]
Soviet Cosmonaut No Atheist
May 3, 2006
World Magazine reported a surprise tidbit from history, to set the record straight: the first man in space was no atheist. According to an urban legend, Yuri Gagarin, who flew a Soviet rocket in 1961, said that he didn’t “see any god up here” in space. The quote has provided fodder for preachers ever since […]
Comparing Preferences for Pain or Gain
May 3, 2006
A group of researchers published in the Journal of Political Economy introduced the idea economic loss and gain incentives are innate, not learned. To demonstrate this concept, the researchers presented capuchin monkeys two opportunities leading to two different outcomes for the monkey: pain or gain. The capuchin monkeys had a tendency to choose the opportunity […]
Limbed Snakes Initiate Evolutionary Quandary
May 3, 2006
Researchers have discovered the fossil of a snake with a pelvis and functioning legs in Rio Negro, Argentina. Sebastian Apesteguía (Argentine Museum of Natural Science) says Najash rionegrina is not the oldest snake discovered; marine snakes have been discovered in North America as well as Eastern Europe. However, Najash rionegrina has been considered the earliest […]
Can We Not Perform Similar Functions?
May 3, 2006
Researchers from King’s College London claim their data evidences the “Human [thyroid] gland probably evolved from gills.”1 According to speculation, gills were internalized as the thyroid gland when marine life evolved into land animals. The possibility for this comes from the similar functions of gills and of the gland: both act as calcium level controls. […]
Tiktaalik: Evolutions Newest Link in the Chain
May 3, 2006
Researchers have recently discovered a fossil on Ellesmere Island, located in the Canadian Arctic. The creature is characteristic of tetrapods, four-legged organisms, and possesses a flattened body, fins, scales, ribs, and a neck. James Owen (National Geographic News1) considers the species, Tiktaalik roseae, to be the connection between aquatic and land animals and prehistoric predecessor […]
The Evolution of Slapstick
May 2, 2006
Some Darwinists think they have figured out the origin of laughter. When our ape-like ancestors started walking, they found it awkward and often tripped over their feet. Bystanding apes apparently found this humorous for some reason, and thus slapstick comedy was born. The Times Online found this story good for some one-liners. How can this […]
Molecular Clock Keeps Wild Time
May 2, 2006
Evolutionists used to hope that the mutation rates in genes were relatively constant, so that they could provide a kind of “molecular clock” for inferring dates of divergence of ancestral species. The first bad news was that not all molecular clocks tick at the same rate (rate heterogeneity). Then they hoped that rate differences corresponded […]
What Use Is Half a Wing?
May 1, 2006
Ken Dial is at it again, trying to explain bird flight from the ground up with his own version of a Darwinian story (see 01/16/2003). The title of his paper in BioScience1 harks back to an old criticism of Darwin’s theory: “What use is half a wing?” Well, half a wing could be a half […]
Insects Lead the Way
April 28, 2006
Why engineer things from scratch, when we can imitate nature? Two recent examples come from the world of insects. A press release from UC Berkeley begins, “Using the eyes of insects such as dragonflies and houseflies as models, a team of bioengineers at University of California, Berkeley, has created a series of artificial compound eyes.” […]
Hominid Claim Is More Philosophy Than Fossils
April 27, 2006
Two weeks ago, the media had a feeding frenzy over Tim White’s claim that his team found bones in Ethiopia from three hominid species lined up in a vertical row, showing a clear progression toward humans. Now, the fine print has come out. A review in Nature1 begins, “Deciding whether our ancestors evolved as a […]
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