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After a focused international search, the Institute for Creation Research Board of Trustees voted unanimously to appoint Dr. Randy J. Guliuzza as ICR’s new President & Chief Operating Officer, effective August 1, 2020. Dr. Henry Morris III will formally retire from his position as Chief Executive Officer in October 2020. Since 2008, Dr. Guliuzza has served as ICR’s National Representative, speaking throughout the Un… More… …read more Source: icr.org     
Archaeologists uncover huge new structure near Stonehenge testifying to ancient man’s ingenuity and brilliance. …read more Source: creation.com     
A study led by Oxford University researchers was recently published confirming that Neanderthals and humans were very genetically similar and interfertile. They were even closer than polar and brown bears are to each other, which are known to mate and produce viable offspring in the wild quite easily.1 Along with a plethora of previous DNA studies, this research further confirms that Neanderthals were an ancient people group of the hum… More… …read more Source: icr.org     
Do whales have leg ‘genes’? …read more Source: creation.com     
By Ken Ham Most people are familiar with the “group shaming” concept of “cancel culture.” It’s defined as “the popular practice of withdrawing support for (i.e., canceling) public figures and companies after they have done or said something considered objectionable or offensive.” Well, as people “cancel” celebrities and organizations for various things, including supposed racist statements, why haven’t they “cancelled” Charles Darwin? A recent opinion piece by Peter Heck on the news site Disrn made this very argument—one I’ve been making in presentations and social media posts for a long time. Heck writes, Even by the most generous of measures, [More]
A total solar eclipse is an amazing phenomenon, and can illustrate biblical teachings …read more Source: creation.com     
By Joel Ebert The slow loris’ large eyes have a reflective layer to help them see in almost total darkness. …read more Source: AIG Daily     
A pair of new studies found that some dinosaurs, and possibly some marine reptiles, laid squishy eggs. One study discovered that many dinosaurs, like turtles and snakes, laid soft leather-like eggs—not hard-shelled eggs like most birds.1 A second study found a massive leathery egg about the size of a football in Cretaceous sediments in Antarctica.2 However, they think it was from a marine reptile and not a dinosaur.More… …read more Source: icr.org     
Is it a safe and healthy practice to build using lots of timber, or not? Some French and Norwegian policy-makers say yes, while some British policy-makers disagree.1 The French support their enthusiasm for constructing buildings with lots of wood, assuming that doing so somehow helps save the planet from manmade global warming. They argue that “timber construction … [helps] trees lock up climate-heating carb… More… …read more Source: icr.org     
By Ken Ham For hundreds of years, we’ve classified organisms according to the system developed by Carl Linnaeus. Organisms fall into various kingdoms, phyla, classes, orders, families, genera, and species. It’s a time-honored method of categorizing what God has made. But some scientists are trying to change this. As you can see, this new system of classification is entirely based on the evolutionary tree of life and the idea that all life had a common ancestor. As one popular science article begins, “Move over, Linnaeus: There’s a new way of naming organisms.” This new system is known as the PhyloCode [More]
By Ken Ham Our head of horticulture at the Ark Encounter told my wife, Mally, and me that the large firecracker plant (Vermillionaire Cuphea) was the best plant to attract hummingbirds, so my wife put one on our deck. It didn’t take long. While I was sitting on the deck, a beautiful female ruby-throated hummingbird—the only breeding hummingbird species in eastern North America—came up to the plant and I was able to snap a couple of photos with my smartphone. Worthy are you, our Lord and God, to receive glory and honor and power, for you created …read more Source: [More]
Once again, a scientific study shows how “farmed” or ranched creatures live better if their domesticated context resembles their natural habitat.1 According to a recent study published in Aquaculture Reports, confined fish at Brazilian farms raising Nile tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus), fared better if they had an assortment of shelter-like structures and/or artificial plants.2,3 As a fish that … More… …read more Source: icr.org     
As June transitions into July, it’s time for fruit harvesting—including apples, peaches, pears, and cherries. Notice how fruit phenology (seasonal life cycles) is linked to the timing of agricultural harvesting. As peach thinning continues, the first fruits are ready to be harvested; sweet cherries in mid-June and sour cherries in late June or early July. July also brings ripe plums, t… More… …read more Source: icr.org     
A complex metabolic process called Chaperone-Mediated-Autophagy (CMA) was thought to be a recent evolutionary development in land vertebrates as it was only previously documented in mammals and birds. Now it has been found to be fully operational in fish—once again demonstrating that a lack of human knowledge is not evidence for evolution.1 Autophagy is an amazingly complex and ingenious process in which cells are … More… …read more Source: icr.org     
By Ken Ham As the national racism crisis continues to rage throughout the United States, Christians must be equipped to think biblically and respond with compassion, biblical truth, and the gospel. Here at Answers in Genesis, we have been sharing articles and videos on a biblical perspective on race and how we are all one blood (Acts 17:26). We are even offering, for a limited time, our 2019 conference One Race, One Blood for free on Answers.tv. (No subscription required for this particular series for a limited time.) My friend Dr. Charles Ware, who co-authored the book One Race, One [More]
A recent study published in the journal Frontiers in Earth Science indicates that North America was once home to large populations of camelids (creatures such as camels, llamas, and alpacas) and antelope-like animals.1,2 Once again, we should be amazed with how God has equipped the camel—and its cousins—to dwell and thrive in many parts of the earth.3 More… …read more Source: icr.org     
No! That was early during Noah’s Flood and continents still existed …read more Source: creation.com     
Folded, bent and deformed rock layers across the globe testify to catastrophe on an unimaginable scale. …read more Source: creation.com     
By Sarah Chaffee On this episode of ID the Future, philosopher of science Paul Nelson continues sharing with host Andrew McDiarmid about pursuing intelligent design theory in a science culture committed to naturalism. Or as Nelson puts it this time, it’s about trying to communicate with scientists who are trapped in a naturalistic parabola. That parabola sets the rule and defines the boundaries for science: naturalistic answers only. And it extends to infinity, so no finite number of objections or counter-examples can force naturalistic scientists out of it. Nelson, however, offers an alternative strategy for drawing them out of the [More]
Simon Turpin is passionate about sharing the importance of creation apologetics, biblical authority, and the gospel with the people of Great Britain. …read more Source: AIG Daily     
The growth rings in Paleozoic corals are often used to support the idea that the earth is very old, but the argument was flawed from the beginning. …read more Source: creation.com     
Have Trinidadian guppies learned evasive maneuvers from Spanish bullfighters? Recent research published in the journal Current Biology1 reports how gutsy guppies confront a regular predator, the voracious pike cichlids, like a matador. They attract the attacker to a location that can be dodged from. Then, at the last instant, the guppy pivots to safety.1-3 Trinidadia… More… …read more Source: icr.org     
By Ken Ham Due to the COVID-19 situation, our award-winning, biblical worldview magazine Answers took a brief hiatus (due to the shutdown and stay-at-home orders), but it’s back and arriving in mailboxes soon. We’re excited that the magazine can continue impacting families with biblical truth. If you haven’t subscribed yet, I encourage you to do so today—you won’t want to miss a single issue. This newest issue features the “other camel”: the llama—along with alpacas, guanacos, and vicuña, all part of the camelid kind. These creatures—living on different continents—actually confirm the Bible’s history. In this issue, you’ll also explore dark [More]
In order for the bizarre theory of evolution to be validated, evolutionists must show how inorganic non-life organized itself into carbon-based (organic) life. They also must show how major transitions in animals occurred, including how fish became the first tetrapods. This means fish fins would need to slowly turn into feet and legs. As one secular journal said, “The evolution of fishes into tetrapods—four-legged vertebrates of which… More… …read more Source: icr.org     
Did octopus fossil ink really survive millions of years? …read more Source: creation.com     
By Ken Ham “Great are the works of the Lord, studied by all who delight in them” (Psalm 111:2). As believers, we should promote the study of God’s creation, delighting in his great works. Sadly, the study of creation is often done from a secular, naturalistic perspective, not a biblical perspective that gives God the glory for what he has made. That shouldn’t be the case! That’s why I’m excited about two new science shows we started a few months ago—Unlocking Science and Unlocking Science Hands On! Unlocking Science introduces science concepts and Unlocking Science Hands On! gives instruction on [More]
The social behavior of ants continues to amaze scientists with its complexity and efficiency of organization and design. In a new study, scientists have shown how ant communities foraging for food and other resources embody a complex system of behavior and path marking that creates an optimized search with minimal waste of energy and time.1 The information gleaned from this study was then applied to the design of computer search algori… More… …read more Source: icr.org