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Under ideal circumstances, we can do a lot of good. But when circumstances handicap or restrict our potential—in ways we cannot circumvent—we just do the best that we can. That principle is true for humans as well as in the water-filtering services of the humble bivalves we call oysters—according to recent research involving the University of Maryland.1,2 Dr. Matthew Gray, an ecologist at… More… …read more Source: icr.org     
When Ziggy the zebra gave birth … …read more Source: creation.com     
Many people are aware that our digestive tract is full of beneficial bacteria that not only help us process our food, but also support a strong immune system. Now, a new research study has just been published showing the importance of healthy bacteria in the respiratory system of our nose and upper sinuses.1 Beneficial types of bacteria living in our digestive system, genital tracts, and on our skin have been proven to p… More… …read more Source: icr.org     
Various water-striding insects use small body sizes, long legs, and fine hairs on their feet to skate on the surfaces of ponds and streams. But life on the open ocean presents tougher challenges than landlocked waterways. Waves, fishes, salt, and birds should spell disaster for such small striders. Only one genus, Halobates, has cracked the ocean code, and new research names the necessary creature features. Scientists from… More… …read more Source: icr.org     
By Ken Ham “Any poor designer with millions of years available for trying out new solutions could have done a much better job [than evolution did].” That’s the conclusion reached by an evolutionary biologist from Norway, Professor Glenn-Peter Sætre, whose opinions on the issue were recently recorded in a lengthy article. This article highlights the supposed “flaws” in the design of the human body. But are these really “flaws”? Here’s what anatomist Dr. David Menton had to say about Sætre’s argument. He declares that these arguments “show a profound lack of understanding of the integrated complexity of the human body.” [More]
About 3,000 years ago, the Bible taught that the “wonders in the deep” are the “works of the Lord.”1 Now that truth has been illustrated with even greater depth by the documented sighting of a super-deep-sea octopus—about 21,000 feet deep at the ocean’s bottom, to be specific.2,3 The deepest ever sighting of an octopus has been made by came… More… …read more Source: icr.org     
The peppered moth myth takes on a new dimension. But genetic evidence shows no novel information caused the change between light and dark moths. …read more Source: creation.com     
By Troy Lacey A skeptical social media post is making the claim that the lesser mole-rat (one of several blind mole rats) is evidence against intelligent design. …read more Source: AIG Daily     
One particular common cuckoo will soon complete a mammoth migration through both Africa and Asia—a migration that is anything but common. Onon is “one of five Cuckoos that were satellite tagged in Mongolia last summer.” He will soon complete a journey of about 7,500 miles from his winter home in Zambia (southern Africa) up to his breeding grounds in Mongolia. “The bird has survived ocean crossings and high w… More… …read more Source: icr.org     
Delving into DNA’s mind-blowing, multi-layered information system …read more Source: creation.com     
God’s handiwork is not just apparent in the amazing complexity of individual creatures, but also in how they interact to form vital parts of entire ecosystems and even to keep life on this planet functioning as a whole. In light of this ecological paradigm, scientist have just revealed the previously hidden and indispensable role that moths play in the nighttime pollination of flowers.1 Pollinators are an important… More… …read more Source: icr.org     
May and June are abuzz with busy bees, really clever bumblebees.1,2 And their practical cleverness continues to astonish researchers, as a recently published study in the journal Science illustrates.3,4 Bees have been delighting creationists for generations.1,5-7 These intelligent creatures can distinguish different humans from each other, as individuals, retaining memory of who is whom.More… …read more Source: icr.org     
Are women superior to men because they have one more X chromosome? Read More
Engineering-minded scientists have taken notice that many types of fish have bodies shaped like a low-drag airfoil that are characteristic of airplane wings. Now, a new research study has proven that the engineered mechanics of this design in fish provide optimized movement and thrust for swimming.1 Human-designed airplane wings have a rounded leading edge combined with a smoothly tapered trailing section that is uniquel… More… …read more Source: icr.org     
A review of Four Views on Creation, Evolution, and Intelligent Design …read more Source: creation.com     
Researchers are now seeking to broaden the spectrum of colors typically represented in manmade products, the BBC reports.1 Experts in the color industry have had a longstanding, behind-the-scenes impact on the colors of clothing, house décor, advertising, product packaging, and countless other aspects of our lives. They have painstakingly studied and formulated ways to bring certain colors into mass production. Th… More… …read more Source: icr.org     
‘Primitive’? A ‘hodge-podge of leftovers’? Or something else? …read more Source: creation.com     
Common shrews are uniquely engineered creatures that have a high metabolism—very different from your average mammal. And now biologists have just discovered the shrew’s built-in adaptive secret to over-wintering that is utterly defying the standard evolutionary paradigms.1 Common shrews exhibit one of the highest levels of bodily metabolism among mammals. As a result of their high energy requirements, they ar… More… …read more Source: icr.org     
Recently, a new study led by Queen Mary University of London concluded that dinosaur bones tell us little about their sexes.1 In the past, secular scientists have made various claims about the ability to make sex determinations in dinosaurs. Most concluded that female predatory dinosaurs (theropods like T. rex) were likely larger than males.2 However, that appears to be unsubstantiated by the actual data. More… …read more Source: icr.org     
The fact that some organisms reproduce more than others, depending on the environment, means that natural selection will be operating in the world before Adam sinned and death and suffering entered in. …read more Source: creation.com     
How did eugenics give rise to many of the modern dog breeds? Read More
By Mia Hiraki, illustrator When we begin to examine life on the molecular level, we quickly begin to realize that hemoglobin is specially designed for multiple purposes. …read more Source: AIG Daily     
By Troy Lacey Are intelligently designed experiments using already present features in already-existing bacteria and viruses really examples of molecules-to-man evolution? …read more Source: AIG Daily     
Research on great apes supposedly helps us understand the evolution of speech. Is this true? …read more Source: creation.com     
When you first look at a hero shrew, you might wonder, “How in the world did this critter get this name?” But these little mole-like creatures are considered to be the Clark Kents of the animal world—their superpowers are hidden under humble exteriors. New research into the amazing structure and function of the hero shrew spine is revealing amazing engineering that utterly defies evolutionary speculation.1More… …read more Source: icr.org     
A Newcastle University press release title reads, “Origins of language pathway in the brain at least 25 million years old.”1 How can science measure the origins of brain pathways that supposedly happened so long before scientists could observe them? And how defensible is the 25 million-year figure? Two unscientific assumptions unwittingly deflate this title’s confident tone. The research team used macaq… More… …read more Source: icr.org     
By Dr. Georgia Purdom New DNA technology has allowed scientists to peer into the past by mapping the DNA of so-called cavemen. …read more Source: AIG Daily