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It’s claimed that evolution explains everything, so what is the evolutionary explanation for how the T. rex, and other species like it, got those tiny arms?
Your most important organ as an unborn baby is the placenta. This organ forms shortly after fertilization.
Researchers have discovered that prehistoric cave painters used cartoon-like techniques and optical toys to create the illusion of movement. Read More
New research may explain how the Great Pyramid of Giza has survived millennia of earthquakes and lost only 33 feet of height.
These remarkable trees continue to flourish despite the effects of atomic bombing, a resilience that attests to a Designer. Read More
The idea that an unborn baby progresses through supposed evolutionary stages during development has long been debunked. But it’s still taught in textbooks!
Water-rounded chert cobbles on Egypt’s Giza Plateau point to catastrophic flood erosion. Read More
Between archaeological wonders, incredible cultural experiences, and deep fellowship with other believers, discover why this truly is a trip unlike any other. Read More
To justify abortion, unborn babies are often referred to as “a pregnancy.” But from the moment of fertilization, a genetically unique person is present.
Thousands of remarkably preserved salamander fossils from Inner Mongolia look identical to species alive today. Read More


What if so-called rapid evolution is not a process of building something new, but it simply reveals what was already there? A recent peer-reviewed study in Science reports that certain DNA segments, called supergenes, may help cichlid fish adapt quickly through large chromosomal inversions that preserve sets of traits.1 Conventional scientists say this shows evolution can move faster than expected. A related report from <i... More...</i... 


According to the fossil record, arthropods—in all their complexity—have always been arthropods.1,2 They belong to the phylum Arthropoda, the largest phylum in the animal kingdom.



The creation model states that if there was a worldwide flood, one would expect bottom-dwelling creatures like arthropods in the ocean to be catastrophically buried first.3 This is indeed the case with aquatic creatures ... More...

Francis Crick’s central dogma revolutionized biology—but does it tell the whole story? A new framework of sequence and episequence information reveals a richer picture of life. Read More
I’ve just started a new series of podcasts, in English and Spanish, detailing some of the spectacular designs found in nature regarding birds, butterflies, plants and many more. Listen and learn why nature in all of its amazing complexity testifies to an intelligence far greater than ours as being the designer and creator of it all. Listen here
How the Portrush Sill of Northern Island can be interpreted from a biblical geological perspective. Read More
Millions of Maya are still alive today, but the Y chromosome DNA results suggested they had disappeared. Could this problem be solved?
Discoveries of ancient cosmetics are upsetting evolutionary stories. Read More
Explore the biblical geology model to understand how Noah’s Flood shaped Earth’s rock layers, fossils, and massive landscape features. Read More
Should we leave room for the possibility of intelligent aliens? Read More
A chance encounter with a rare shark migration off the Gold Coast leads to a fascinating dive into the extraordinary engineering behind the hammerhead’s iconic shape. Read More


What if new species could appear in just a few thousand years? A recent study reports that many new plankton species showed up quickly after the supposed Chicxulub impact—a large asteroid event believed to have caused the extinction of the dinosaurs. Some of the plankton appeared in less than 2,000 years.1 The study claims this shows fast evolution. But the evidence fits better with rapid change within created kinds, not th... More...

Whatever scenario evolutionists invoke, they cannot adequately explain the moon’s origin. Read More
Elephant tusks show evidence of selection pressure, but this is fundamentally different from evolution. Read More
Did dinosaurs once swim across what’s now the Atlantic Ocean to colonize Africa?
Ice behaves as a rock in many different ways. Read More
Seals were once mercilessly hunted for economic benefit. The more we learn of these special marine animals, the more we can appreciate the unique wisdom in their design. Read More


Based on a new fossil discovery and reevaluation of previously known fossil material, paleontologists have described two species of giant Cretaceous fossil octopuses, Nanaimoteuthis jeletzkyi and Nanaimoteuthis haggarti.1–3 These fossil octopuses belong to the suborder Cirrata, or Cirrina. Cirrate octopuses have cilia-like strands on their arm suckers and fins on their mantles (large, umbrellalike organs t... More...