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
Tas Walker talks to Philip Worts about geology and ground-breaking discoveries …read more Source: creation.com
By Dr. Andrew A. Snelling Even today you can touch rocks that date all the way back to God’s original creation. What do they tell us about that lost world? …read more Source: AIG Daily
Droughts across north Texas dried the Paluxy River bed, famous for its dinosaur footprints. Ordinarily, the dinosaur tracks lie buried beneath water-covered mud, but dry conditions enabled workers to remove the mire that had long covered them at Dinosaur Valley State Park near Glen Rose. Reports of the newly exposed tracks revive the thrill of discovery as well as mysteries about these tracks.1 For example, why are ther… More… …read more Source: icr.org
By Troy Lacey Is Sahelanthropus closer to a chimp or a human? …read more Source: AIG Daily
An extraordinary fossil leaves a record of death which scientists are struggling to explain. …read more Source: creation.com
How do we explain large-scale oscillations in ice cores within biblical Earth history? …read more Source: creation.com
By Troy Lacey How creationists can interpret unique plesiosaur fossil evidence in a flood context …read more Source: AIG Daily
A new dinosaur discovery in Rio Negro Province in central Argentina resulted in a very peculiar assertion.1 A bipedal dinosaur (walked on two legs) named Jakapil kaniukura was unearthed in upper Zuni megasequence rocks. But what made this new dinosaur so unusual was the category scientists placed it in. Their evolutionary analysis puts this bipedal dinosaur in the Thyreophoran (“shield-bearer”) category with dinosa… More… …read more Source: icr.org
How was the soft tissue of an ammonite fossilized without its shell attached? …read more Source: creation.com
By Dr. Andrew A. Snelling In a few rare spots, geologists find fossils of strange eight-foot-tall “mushrooms.” What do they tell us about the mysterious world they came from? …read more Source: AIG Daily
The newly named dinosaurs Paralitherizinosaurus was described as ‘scissorhands’ with long slashing claws, but what were they used to eat? …read more Source: creation.com
A new discovery in Morocco’s Saharan Desert has evolutionary scientists making claims that plesiosaurs lived in freshwater too.1 Usually thought of as marine reptiles, plesiosaurs have been found on nearly every continent. Most are found within rock layers containing other marine organisms, but these were found in rocks with dinosaurs. Could the global Flood provide a better explanation? Scientists from the Univers… More… …read more Source: icr.org
Anthropologists Thomas Urban (Cornell University) and Daron Duke (Far Western Anthropological Research Group) recently found preserved human footprints on an Air Force testing range located on the salt flats of Utah.1 These footprints are called “ghost tracks” because they are very hard to see except after rainfall when moisture can make them visible. Ground-penetrating radar revealed the presence of even more impressions f… More… …read more Source: icr.org
A proposed five-stage time sequence for the early part of the global Flood, with an emphasis on geochemistry. …read more Source: creation.com
Who doesn’t like to watch the antics of the friendly dolphin? They are classified as Cetaceans (which also includes the porpoise and the whale). Creationists maintain cetaceans have always been cetaceans while evolutionists have a strange hypothesis regarding their origin. They suggest millions of years ago marine mammals evolved from land mammals called even-toed ungulates (artiodactyls) and are related to the tiny mouse-dee… More… …read more Source: icr.org
Some recent science news stories have come out describing fossils of insects feeding on plants supposedly many “millions of years ago.” What is amazing is the fossil plants and insects are just like the ones we find alive today.1 All that is different are the grossly inflated evolutionary ages (‘deep evolutionary time’) unnecessarily forced on them. These fossils are interesting because there is no evolution doc… More… …read more Source: icr.org
Now this is exciting: “Geologists have found the fossil of the earliest known animal predator. The 560-million-year-old specimen is the first of its kind, but it is related to a group of animals that includes corals, jellyfish and [sea] anemones living on the planet today.”1 This particular group of invertebrates is called the Cnidaria, pronounced ‘nye-DARE-ee-uh.’ Their bodies often contain a jel… More… …read more Source: icr.org
David Attenborough’s millions of years for the formation of the Galápagos islands is falsified by the recently formed Surtsey Island. …read more Source: creation.com