New research shows how gold was deposited quickly as hot colloidal liquid at depth, aided by sea water. This is consistent with the Flood and not millions of years. …read more Source: creation.com
The discovery of dozens of ichthyosaur fossils in Nevada was announced in the journal Current Biology.1 Seven 50-foot long ichthyosaurs of the species Shonisaurus were found in a single layer, and up to 30 more were spread vertically across deposits totaling over 650 feet thick.1 Oddly, almost all of the fossils were large adults, mixed with some neonatal specimens. There were no juveniles or subadult… More… …read more Source: icr.org
Evidence of human habitation underwater—evidence of a lower sea level during the immediate post-Flood era? …read more Source: creation.com
How has subsequent research changed how we look at various fossils associated with human evolution? …read more Source: creation.com
A great book for studying geology. …read more Source: creation.com
The InSight robotic lander found evidence in the interior of Mars for the existence of an active giant mantle plume, a large blob of molten rock that is rising, not unlike a wax blob in a 1970s-era lava lamp.1,2 The presence of an active mantle plume surprised mainstream scientists because they thought Mars was more-or-less dead, geologically speaking. Planetary scientist Jeff Andrews-Hanna said, More… …read more Source: icr.org
According to paleontologist Walter Joyce, ‘there’s really no reason to enter the fossil record while you are mating.’ He’s right—and wrong. …read more Source: creation.com
Rapid, episodic burial and the conundrums it presents for uniformitarian dating. …read more Source: creation.com
Are alternating layers of fine and coarse sand grains (laminations) in rocks evidence for deep time? Here we see many forming in real time, quickly. …read more Source: creation.com
Radiocarbon dating seems like solid science. It appeals as a kind of time machine, providing a clear peephole to peer into the past. However, a new debate over ancient human footprints from New Mexico shows one way that this supposed peephole can get all fogged up. A 2021 study had assigned an age of about 22,000 carbon years to sediments that hold mammoth, giant sloth, and human footprints found in the ancient Lake Otero Basin.More… …read more Source: icr.org
Juveniles catastrophically mired in deep mud after larger mature members of the herd abandoned them to their fate? …read more Source: creation.com
By Dr. Andrew A. Snelling The Everglades features one of the most diverse ecosystems on earth—with a surprising geological history. …read more Source: AIG Daily
Highlighting delta formation in the Kaystros river estuary within biblical history …read more Source: creation.com
The transitional fossil that wasn’t …read more Source: creation.com
By Dr. John H. Whitmore We can only imagine what happened after the Flood! Consider five major examples of catastrophes that reshaped the planet. …read more Source: AIG Daily
Paleontologists have discovered “early fossils [of] simple hollow tubes ranging from a few millimetres to many centimetres in length.”1 Furthermore, they have unearthed the animals that inhabited these tubes (made of calcium phosphate) that were formerly unoccupied. The fossilized creatures appear in a very un-Darwinian fashion, being suddenly and completely formed. Furthermore, the evidence shows they were buried cat… More… …read more Source: icr.org
Misinterpretation of ice core data by Uniformitarian scientists could be fueling some of the current global warming alarm. …read more Source: creation.com
It’s now known that those beautiful crystals on display didn’t need millions of years to form …read more Source: creation.com
Tetrataenite, a promising alternative to rare-earth magnets, was thought to need millions of years to form, but a lab formed it quickly. …read more Source: creation.com
Two separate studies claim massive tsunamis and earthquakes from an asteroid impact profoundly affected the rock record. One research team modeled a 1.5 km (1 mile) high water wave that propagated across the ocean following the Chicxulub impact, causing sweeping erosion across the ocean floor.1 Another report asserted the same impact generated a mega-earthquake that caused twisted and contorted sedimentary layering around the wor… More… …read more Source: icr.org
A fossil fish heart, in remarkable condition, was found in Western Australia. It was embedded in a chunk of sedimentary rock dated by evolutionists to be 380 million years old. Co-author of the study, Per Ahlberg of Sweden’s Uppsala University, was quick to make an unwarranted and bizarre fish/human connection, That we ourselves and all the other living organisms with which we share the … More… …read more Source: icr.org
Radiometric dating breakthroughs …read more Source: creation.com
How Noah’s Flood provides a better context for explaining their formation …read more Source: creation.com
Recently, a fossil believed to be a juvenile duck-billed dinosaur was found in a hillside in Dinosaur Provincial Park, Canada. The scientists discovered “two exposed fossils, a foot and part of a tail clad in fossilized skin” and dated them to be 75-77 million years old.1 A researcher stated this mummy has the potential of being “one of the best-preserved dinosaur fossils ever discovered.” This ha… More… …read more Source: icr.org
By Ken Ham According to the evolutionary worldview, dinosaurs first appear in the Triassic period (with the most well-known dinosaurs not emerging until the Jurassic and Cretaceous), when mammals were few and very small. Now a new study claims they’ve identified the “earliest known mammal,” moving back the “appearance of mammals by about 20 million years.” This study is quite controversial, with many scientists arguing that this tiny, 8-inch creature wasn’t a mammal at all. What do both sides of the Brasilodon quadrangularis debate have wrong? The new study, which looked at cross-sections of the creature’s jaws, discovered that B.
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In 2002, Professor Michel Brunet of the University of Poitiers, France, described a tiny fossil ape skull nicknamed Toumaï as an upright-walking human ancestor.1 This ancient skull and other possibly associated partial bones from Chad belong to the Sahelanthropus kind. Though Brunet enjoyed fame for finally finding a missing link in human evolution, some of his colleagues were and remain convinced that the Toumaï ind… More… …read more Source: icr.org
How can these ice sheets which are so different be explained by the same Ice Age? …read more Source: creation.com