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Survival of the Fittest or the Luckiest?
February 6, 2005
Evolutionists assume that bacteria spread because they evolve resistance to antibiotics and become more fit to survive. That’s apparently not true, says a story in EurekAlert about a study from Imperial College, London: the spread of bacteria appears to be due to chance alone. Here are two quotes from the article by team […]
Molecular Machine Parts Stockpiled in Readiness for Assembly
February 6, 2005
A team from the European Molecular Biology Laboratory has done a “4D” time-and-materials study of molecular machines, analyzing the process of assembly, reports EurekAlert. They found that the cell stockpiles some parts and holds them in storage, but adds the crucial elements just in time. The researchers discovered that in yeast, key components needed to […]
Will Top-Down and Bottom-Up Meet in the Middle?
February 6, 2005
Some difficult problems can be approached from opposite ends. Engineers needing to build a shaft through a mountain, for instance, might start digging from the bottom and the top, trying to find each other in the middle. But what if the mountain has an unanticipated impregnable layer? Or what if there is no mountain, but […]
Darwinian Funding Makes Losers Angry
February 4, 2005
Evolutionists love Darwinism – except when it threatens their funding. Daniel Clery complained in Science1 this week that it means the demise of physics and chemistry in UK universities. “Survival of the fittest” seems to be favoring the departments that provide lucrative careers. The funding shortfall for traditional chemistry and physics is due partly, of […]
Selecting Corn Oil Genes Produces More Corn Oil, but What Else?
February 4, 2005
Breeders have been trying to squeeze more corn oil out of corn for over a century, one of the longest-running scientific experiments ever. They have made pretty dramatic gains in yield, from 5% to 20%, in 100 generations, says William G. Hill in Science.1 Now also, geneticists have the tools to look for which genes […]
Age Estimate for Oldest Glacier Revised Way Down
February 2, 2005
Deposits from Antarctic glacial ice thought to be 8.1 million years old have been re-dated at not more than 310,000 years old, and maybe as little as 43,000, reports a team writing in the Feb. issue of Geology.1 Ng (MIT), Hallet, Sletten and Stone (U. of Washington) analyzed cosmogenic helium-3 and calculated the rate of […]
Genes Evolving Downward
February 2, 2005
Those assuming the evolution of eukaryotic genomes has progressed upward in complexity may find the following abstract from PNAS1 startling: We use the pattern of intron conservation in 684 groups of orthologs from seven fully sequenced eukaryotic genomes to provide maximum likelihood estimates of the number of introns present in the same orthologs in various […]
Bird Brain No Longer an Insult
February 1, 2005
“Birds can perform amazing tasks beyond the reach of cats and dogs,” begins an article in the BBC News. So pay a little respect. You can still call your boss a bird brain, but had better quickly explain why that is a compliment. See also the longer article on MSNBC News. In a […]
Teachers Getting Reluctant to Teach Evolution
February 1, 2005
Cornelia Dean in the New York Times worries that, to stay out of trouble, more and more biology teachers are avoiding the discussion of evolution. Dean quotes someone who claims “the practice of avoiding the topic was widespread, particularly in districts where many people adhere to fundamentalist faiths.” But why would teachers fear discussing it […]
Editorials Lukewarm to ID, but Not as Hot to Darwin
January 31, 2005
A subtle shift seems to be taking place in media coverage of intelligent-design controversies in school boards across the country. Darwinists used to be the unchallenged kings of the hill. Alternatives, whether creationism or intelligent design, were disqualified before they reached the starting gate. It also used to be “open season” on anti-Darwinists. No vituperative […]
Your Motors Are Turbo-Charged
January 30, 2005
Think how fast 6000 rpm is. It would redline on most cars. Yet you have motors in your body that make that speed look like slow-mo. The Japanese have taken great interest in the cellular machine ATP synthase since its rotary operation was discovered in 1996 (see 12/22/2003 entry). Maybe it’s because they […]
Astrobiology: 0 Steps Forward, 3 Steps Back
January 28, 2005
Astrobiology, the science in search of a subject, has major hurdles to overcome in its quest to explain everything from hydrogen to high technology. Despite being one of the most active interdisciplinary research projects around the world (see 01/07/2005 entry), a leading researcher this week conceded that several promising leads of the past are now […]
Bat Theory Strikes Out
January 28, 2005
An international team of biologists set out to write the family history of bats, a story that is “largely unknown,” they admitted in Science.1 They didn’t have much to go on. “The fossil record is impoverished,” their research confirmed, so they tried to piece together a phylogenetic story by combining all that is known about […]
Medical Professionals Lambaste the Nature of Ethics
January 27, 2005
Nature’s editorial on religion and ethics last month (see 12/09/2004 entry) motivated two medical professionals to write in and give the journal a piece of their mind.1 Apparently indignant over the editorial’s patronizing view of religion and its simplistic view of ethics, they made it clear that the scientific establishment is no judge of truth […]
Venus Flytrap Is Snappy-Fast
January 27, 2005
One tenth of a second is all the time the fly gets. The traps of the Venus flytrap, an insectivorous plant Charles Darwin called “one of the most wonderful in the world,” somehow responds to stimuli quickly without muscles. The entire mechanism is still largely unknown. A team of French, UK and American scientists set […]
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